Your government fought in Afghanistan for 20 years. In quite similar circumstances against many times the same enemy as the Russians had.So honestly I really can't bring myself to the level of condemnation the pro-NATO crowd levies at the Russians when it's really nothing different from what our own governments would do in exactly the same circumstance. — Benkei
Then make the revelant link by all means.It's not off topic because the US are heavily involved in Ukraine, so their reputation is very relevant. — Isaac
If a war effects for example your work, I think it's obviously more important for you than something that just notice every once in a while in the papers.You really think it's "distance" and not "skin colour" determining the wildly different reactions to war, or which presumably there's always one side in the wrong and at least somebody is a victim, in different continents? — boethius
Of course not! In fact it seems that others have these kind of ideas.I honestly don't get what you're even trying to argue on this topic of the "little green men".
Are you saying if we catch the US or the Ukrainians in a lie then we can assume everything they say is a lie? — boethius
There's not enough trust between countries for that, unfortunately. And things are now getting just worse as military spending is going to increase.If wars are not inevitable lets go for total disarmament, I mean total. Some countries do not have armed forces. — FreeEmotion
Ah, the race card!Meanwhile, genocide in Ethiopia. But the Western countries are falling over each other to be the first to voice paroxysomatic condemnations of Russia's behaviour because at least Ukrainians are white. — Benkei
The point is that you can use common sense. It's not all that blurry and utterly confusing that you cannot make sense of it.You gave me one picture. If you want me to comment on the " massive amount" of similar pictures you'll have to post them. Of course, corroborating evidence is one of the things a further investigation would look for. You were talking about a single image. — Isaac
Yes, and if someone says things that seem to be incorrect to me or I disagree with, then one should point it out.This is s discussion forum. It's for discussion. — Isaac
If you want to see how upset people can be in this forum, check up the threads about the George Floyd killing and police violence in general. That was heated.If you want to read up on the news or let everyone know how upset you are, I strongly suggest you use the appropriate institutions specialising in those services. — Isaac
Selective?Don't let your selective moral indignation disturb you then. — Benkei
Why should this disturb me more than Yemen exactly? — Benkei
Don't let the denazification of Ukraine disturb you:Talking about narratives. "Kill the brutes" seems like an interesting series which I'm going to watch instead of post. :wink: — Benkei
“What should Russia do with Ukraine?” published by the news agency RIA Novosti, declares that Russian forces should not draw sharp distinctions between Ukraine’s military and civilians.
“Denazification is necessary when a significant part of the people – most likely the majority – has been absorbed and drawn into politics by the Nazi regime. That is, when the hypothesis “the people are good – the government is bad” does not work,” it states.
The RIA article, written by Timofei Sergeitsev, goes on to say that “a significant part of the popular mass, which are passive Nazis, accomplices of Nazism, is also guilty… War criminals and active Nazis must be punished approximately and demonstratively. Total purification should be carried out.”
That's totally illogical and basically a strawman argument. It is Putin who is saying that those forces in the picture are Crimean volunteers.They appear to be Russian soldiers. Because they're meant to appear to be Russian soldiers, that's the point of the propaganda image.
Propaganda is something which is presented to appear to be one thing, when it is, in fact, another. — Isaac
What's your argumentation here? As if we didn't want to have trade with Russia? On the contrary, the Europeans would have just loved to have that commerce and trade with Russia, just the same way as we have wanted with China. The idea went, just like with China, that economic prosperity will make these countries have better relations with us. And that they will change to be like us and value things like rule of law and democracy (and the usual stuff).Where we went wrong is not making serious progress in trying to increase economic interdependence with Russia in the 90s when circumstances were right. — Benkei
What policy are you talking about?Instead the West collectively chose to keep treating them as enemies. That was the wrong policy. — Benkei
In one of his earliest new foreign policy initiatives, President Obama sought to reset relations with Russia and reverse what he called a “dangerous drift” in this important bilateral relationship. President Obama and his administration have sought to engage the Russian government to pursue foreign policy goals of common interest – win-win outcomes -- for the American and Russian people.
No. But you can use your own judgement. Some of the most blatant lies are so obvious.Wow. You're going with "It looks like a lie to me, therefore it must be one". Because you're infallible? — Isaac
The key pert, for our purposes here, being thatit will look like one thing. So if you just take everything to be the way it looks to be, then you'll fall for every single propaganda piece presented to you. — Isaac
[/img]Being dependent on energy from a totalitarian regime like Putin's Russia, which will use that dependence as a way to imply pressure has been a wrong policy. That energy policy has to be changed. Germany should show resolve in this too. Hopefully it will change it's policies.What really pisses me off is how no European government calls it out, while we're the ones that run all the major risks, because of financial risks and energy dependence, right after the Ukrainians. — Benkei
Those who see sphere's of influence as an obvious reality, greater countries dominating weaker ones and annexations of territories of sovereign states as totally justified simply don't care about issues like that.How about asking the Ukrainians? About Ukraine, you know, where they live (and are now bombed)? About what they want? — jorndoe
How can you be certain of that? A nuclear change could have also resulted in just millions of dying yet in a stalemate like in the Korean war and the Soviet Union still persisting with only now the World having experienced a wider nuclear war. And some American cities being destroyed.I see the rationality of Curtis LeMays' view: it would have resulted in submissive, united Russia, prosperous and peaceful. — FreeEmotion
And you don't see an obvious lie when it's presented? In your postmodern life you are totally unable in every issue to do that?Both sides lie. So why believe one and not the other? — Isaac
Of course not... :roll:I don't understand this proposition at all. If you already know the 'truth' (such that you know one side tells the truth and the other lies) then why would you "look for the truth" at all? You already know it. — Isaac

I'm trying to understand people who are quick to defend Russia. I mean people like Benkei, who may not qualify as apologist, but seems to jump to defend Putin in a way he wouldn't for other leaders, particularly an American president.
What is behind that? Does it come down to anti-American sentiment where any enemy of the US is a friend? If not, then what? Do you have an idea? — frank
As I recall it was an Ukrainian air force plane, a large one, at altitude, which should have sent alarm bells ringing. Interestingly, the route over Ukraine was changed due to the war there. — FreeEmotion
Siberia Airlines Flight 1812 was a commercial flight shot down by the Ukrainian Air Force over the Black Sea on 4 October 2001, en route from Tel Aviv, Israel to Novosibirsk, Russia. The aircraft, a Soviet-made Tupolev Tu-154, carried 66 passengers and 12 crew members. Most of the passengers were Israelis visiting relatives in Russia. There were no survivors. The crash site is about 190 km west-southwest of the Black Sea resort of Sochi, 140 km north of the Turkish coastal town of Fatsa and 350 km south-southeast of Feodosiya in Crimea. The accident resulted from combat-missile launches during joint Ukrainian-Russian military air-defence exercises. The exercises were held at the Russian-controlled training ground of the 31st Russian Black Sea Fleet Research center on Cape Opuk near the city of Kerch in Crimea. Ukraine eventually admitted that it might have caused the crash, probably by an errant S-200 missile fired by its armed forces. Ukraine paid $15 million to surviving family members of the 78 victims ($200,000 per victim).
I don't think I was an optimist in any way. I just explained that even if nations can be theoretically against warcrimes and try preventing civilian casualties, it doesn't mean that warcrimes wouldn' happen. Yet if your strategy is to affect the civilian population, be it the firebombings of Japan, ethnic cleansing in the Balkans or the way Russia fought in Chechnya (and seems to be fighting in Ukraine), there something more to it than just the act of random violence. It's just then that the scale can be far greater.Other than that I find your optimism misplaced. Nagasaki and Hiroshima and the fire bombing of Tokyo ring a bell? How many were court martialed? Iraq? Afghanistan? Libya? Kosovo? Anything? Torture and renditions? What's Cheney doing nowadays anyway? — Benkei

But of course.As Benkei (an actual lawyer) has already pointed out, there does need to be some sort of credible investigation, chance for the accused to defend themselves, and, ideally, some sort of impartial trial to determine war crimes, or crimes in general. — boethius
Again something very obvious. In Abu Ghraib the military policemen didn't invent out of boredom to humiliate the Iraqi inmates. They were specifically told to do so. It's actually rather difficult to hide a chain of command is something is perpetrated by en masse compared to one individual event.Additionally, war crimes by individual soldiers or units (which I do not doubt has happened; it's essentially guaranteed in any war) do not automatically translate to being war crimes of the military or the government. It must be some sort of institutionalised policy or direct order. — boethius
What that's got to do with the comment you cited, which was about the morality of fighting for universals such as 'national identity', I'm afraid I've no idea. — Isaac
The more the Russians murder innocent bystanders, children, grandmothers and the likes, the more hospitals, maternities and supermarket they bomb , the harder it will be to make any lasting peace. Ukrainians will never forgive such a behavior from their neighbours. I think they could forgive the war, being attacked for nothing, but not the massacre of defenseless innocents. Russian heads will have to roll now. — Olivier5
There's plenty of anti-Americanism going around and hypocrisy is one of the first thing spoken about. How can they complain about human rights abuses when they had their renditions, water boarding and torture, Abu Ghraib? How can they complain about aggression when we had aggression in Iraq and Afghanistan and Pakistan? — Benkei
(TASS) Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov slammed the situation in the Ukrainian town of Bucha as fake attack. According to him, a fake attack was staged there, which Ukraine and the West disperse through all channels and social networks.


The Ukrainian military claims that Russia has begun to secretly mobilize reserves and will give priority to mobilizing people with combat experience. The Moscow authorities hope to mobilize an additional 60,000 troops.
I think Russia can change and it isn't destined to be in a vicious circle of totalitarianism and gangster capitalism. The future isn't an extrapolation from history: even if Russia has only few short attempts of having democracy, that isn't an obstacle that it couldn't overcome.If you're wondering how Russia can change its politics, education isn't the primary problem. — jamalrob
That description was closer to what was happening: an attempt (that failed).Western narrative built up the Western highway as "the big battle to siege Kiev" — boethius

Basically the situation in Kyiv and in Mariupol are quite different. One is under siege, one isn't.Seriously? You're quibbling about the correct terminology? — Isaac
I'm not sure if it is so simply that the good things happen because of good people and bad ones because of the bad.I see no way for the good people of this world to control the trajectory of their nations be it in economy, foreign policy or the environment, maybe they never had a prayer, though revolutions keep occurring 360 degrees revolutions, these. Paradoxically, the unpredictability of war has the chance to disrupt the system. It is not ideal. — FreeEmotion
I don't think all roads save one were cut off. And I think the trains have been moving also.A. If all roads are cut off save one, and that can be covered by artillery, missile and air cover, maybe supplies are disrupted enough. As has already been mentioned, few sieges in history are perfect, so certainly Russia disrupted Ukrainian supply of Kiev, and with modern weapons and surveillance maybe a modern siege doesn't literally require a circle of guard and torches all the way around the city. — boethius
(the Economist, March 18th) The trains are fast becoming the arteries of Ukraine’s wartime being, moving refugees and exports west, and critical humanitarian supplies back to the centre. Tickets have in effect become voluntary, and the system runs almost entirely on emergency state subsidies, which last month cost 18bn hryvnia ($612m).
I think here media reporting doesn't use the word accurately. It's more like if the advance stops and one side bombards a city, it is called a siege when it's not technically one. Basically it's only that the city (or part of it) has become the frontline.B. The media started reporting it as a siege once the West highway was taken, so maybe the definition of siege is changing to fit modern warfare (rather than medieval and ancient warfare). — boethius
Did they in Afghanistan? Nobody supported them... the leaders just siphoned money with salaries of nonexistent servicemen and proved no support for the army to defend itself in the Taliban offensive. So it was easy for the Taleban to make the deal to the ANA soldiers that if they go home, they won't kill them. Many took that offer. The Afghan way of war.Everyone support their troops There should be condition of enlistment that they will only fight wars sanctioned by the UN Security council. That will show them. — FreeEmotion
Thanks for the articles. Yes, I agree with you. And in the Russian way likely people will say one thing publicly and one thing in the kitchen with people they trust. When Putin veers the discourse into something equivalent of Soviet times (without the ideology), then Russians adapt.But then the mood changes. There is the expected rally-around-the-flag effect, as well as a realization that, like it or not, this is a new reality to which they will have to adapt. — SophistiCat
So we'll probably see a wave of assassinations? — frank
Yet did Putin need to consolidate his power? I think after over 20 years he has consolidated power quite well. Of course, now after starting a large war, he can go against anybody on the basis of them being a fifth column.The NY Times says that though he isn't going to end up taking over Ukraine, the war has consolidated his power in Russia. The sanctions have also done that: isolated Russia from the rest of the world in a way that Putin wants.
So it could be a success for him in ways other than militarily. — frank
Be that as it may, the Russians can be argued to have functionally encircle Kiev with only 1 remaining road for supply, and the remaining south route in range of artillery.
Kiev is arguably under siege. Few sieges in history are "perfect". — boethius
This hasn't at all happened, so what are you talking about? Quite baseless remarks.a military operation in which enemy forces surround a town or building, cutting off essential supplies, with the aim of compelling those inside to surrender.
I have no trouble in mentioning those times when they have acted as such.True. Does that apply to occasionally reminding everyone what imperialist warmongering bastards America are too! — Isaac
Lol.If we're having a grown up discussion, one does not occasionally interject to say "of course, Santa Claus doesn't really exist". — Isaac
