Or to just undermine the propaganda so that Russia's actions cannot be justified by them through lies. — Christoffer
it has to do with interpreting the behaviors of these governments and how the information has played out in earlier phases. — Christoffer
Having security concerns are really a bit different from attacking other countries. — ssu
Don't you think that is one of the possible explanations but not the only one? Probabilities aside. — FreeEmotion
Try and make a conclusion that only uses what we actually know. — Christoffer
Russia is now trying to smoke screen a possible attack with chemical weapons — Christoffer
Based on previous behaviors during this war. — Christoffer
you are confusing evidence for the existence of a bioweapon facility with predicting war desinformation based on previous desinformation and active on-going desinformation. — Christoffer
as I said it can have variants of pathogens for research purposes that if released by bombardments could potentially be catastrophic for the entire world. — Christoffer
And if we're going by your narrative, what's the reason Russia would go there? Or do anything with it? — Christoffer
When the risk is that Russia might use chemical weapons it gets turned into "but the US should be blamed because there might be a lab in Ukraine", or "Ukraine should be blamed because Nato". — Christoffer
My point was how they were aiming to blame the west and Ukraine for their own attacks. — Christoffer
And that means that there are no higher tier labs anywhere with pathogens much worse? That doesn't mean a thing. — Christoffer
Research facilities on biological substances exist all over the world — Christoffer
What evidence? — Christoffer
Seems that you have been gone a long time for some strawman argument, in thinking I'm denying something. — ssu
Russia still has a perfectly legitimate strategic interest in not being in a position to be attacked by NATO. — Isaac
Again. Russia has the most nuclear weapons in the World. Nobody is attacking it.
That's enough, really. - ssu
NATO has attacked loads of people. Bosnia, Kosovo, Libya, Afghanistan... It's attacked them under the auspices of peacekeeping goals but it still attacked them, so Russia still has a perfectly legitimate strategic interest in not being in a position to be attacked by NATO. The fact that you personally trust their judgement of what counts as 'peacekeeping' is irrelevant in international relations.
If you're gonna conclude anything as facts you need to have actual evidence — Christoffer
Russia is now trying to smoke screen a possible attack with chemical weapons — Christoffer
I think anyone who looks at this source will get a good feel for my view that handing out small arms to civilians is just killing people for no military justification. People with rifles will be fired upon by mortar and artillery, bombs dropped on them etc. — boethius
I do support that, and of course that is something that people can make their own decisions about.
The people of Ukraine are fighting for freedom and democracy not just for Ukraine, but for the whole of Europe because that’s what President Putin is challenging.
Every country has strategic interest in their neighbors. — ssu
how to promote those interests is always limited. And military intervention is usually the last thing. — ssu
It's called deterrence. — ssu
As Russia has the most nuclear weapons, it can be pretty sure that any country won't attack it. That should be obvious. — ssu
I'm bit confused why you really seem not to get that having strategic interests doesn't mean a country can invade another one country whenever feeling like it. — ssu
We only hear the pro-war almost kamikaze level fanaticism side of Ukrainians (as you point out) but we'll hear other voices as soon as the war ends: and the viscous partisan fighting has only just begun. — boethius
you are quoting just part of a paragraph and splitting a sentence. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You're assuming there is a deal offered. Lavrov and the Russian state just spent months telling bald faced lie after bald faced lie to journalists, diplomats, military attaches, etc., and now they say "here are our generous terms, all they'd have to do is say yes!" and you buy it 100%? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I was referring to your credulity regarding Russian public facing statements, not commenting on Ukraine's diplomatic position. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Zelenskyy finds himself fighting an existential war with a foe that keeps repeating they just want the exact same situation as a before the war, just de jure instead of de facto. — boethius
Sure, that's exactly what I was saying... :roll: — Count Timothy von Icarus
Lavrov and the Russian state just spent months telling bald faced lie after bald faced lie to journalists, diplomats, military attaches, etc., and now they say "here are our generous terms, all they'd have to do is say yes!" — Count Timothy von Icarus
I explained those points in detail. You seem to want to reduce my answers to binary 100% yes, 100% no answers. That isn't the case in any complex phenomenon. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A choice. But not the only choice. Defend to get a better peace treaty is a possibility also. — ssu
Lose more of their young men, armed forces, women and children — Isaac
Yes, countries when attacking other countries are weaker and while defending themselves are stronger. — ssu
“Biological research labs”. Russia claims they are bio-weapons labs; America claims they are bio-defence labs. One way or another, I’m sure American tax-payers love finding out they are funding this.
Victoria Nuland, who once handed out cookies to Maidan protesters, tells us all about them. — NOS4A2
Obviously they can maintain a war effort long term — Count Timothy von Icarus
The best way forward for Ukraine is to win this war on the battlefield. — Olivier5
100% correct. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Sanctions won't stop an invasion. — Count Timothy von Icarus
They are causing significant additional damage to Putin's grip on power and reducing Russian incentives for continuing the war — Count Timothy von Icarus
11 million Russians have family members in Ukraine, so efforts to hide the war seen particularly foolish because it's going to put moderates and even supporters in a position of facing prison sentences just for speaking the obvious truth about the "special operation." — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's humiliating at the operational level because they went at lengths to present themselves as a peer rival to NATO and have had abysmal performance in some areas. — Count Timothy von Icarus
losing billions, crashing your currency, (likely) going into bankruptcy — Count Timothy von Icarus
My guess, given Russia's previous demands, is that the demands are such that Ukraine can not only not join NATO, but cannot receive military aid and training from NATO. It should be clear why this is untenable. — Count Timothy von Icarus
having [their] military humiliated, having 5,000-12,000 KIA in two weeks, leveling large areas of cities, losing billions, crashing your currency, (likely) going into bankruptcy (according to the ratings agencies) — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ukraine is quite poor and lacks the ability to sustain the defense posture it has now — Count Timothy von Icarus
Given the current situation, what is to stop Russia from deciding that the Ukrainian state has become "too Nazified," in five years, and launching another invasion? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ritual humiliation of singular individuals having always been a mover and shaker of world history of course. Whole libraries devoted to bad feelings and positive international outcomes. — StreetlightX
Imagine observing the current events and thinking: "we need to aggressively address Putin's feelings. This is very important - the most important - and totally not bad fiction writing for edgy teen novels". The brain-rot it must take. — StreetlightX
To recover territory and scare the Russian army for a long time, as already explained. — Olivier5
It's not you and me fighting there, it's them. And they fight for their own reasons. — Olivier5
there is an objective need, from EU residents perspective, to scare Putin into a less bellicose posture. — Olivier5
Putin needs to know that he can lose wars, and he needs to know how it feels, to internalize it, to learn his lesson. — Olivier5
as long as Russia controls so much of the gas trade to Central Europe, Germany and even Italy, they have a huge lever that they can use against us. — Olivier5
it is in Europe's long term interest to diversify its gas suppliers. Hence it is vital to European long term, strategic interest that Ukraine takes back Crimea. — Olivier5
Because Poland is part of NATO, of course. — Olivier5
No objective security concern would justify the current bloated US military. It is more a question of how the militaro-industrial complex is phagocytating the US budget. — Olivier5
Sanctions will cripple Russia whether or not they murder or otherwise brutalize folks in Donbass. — Olivier5
Military types say you need three or four attackers for every defender, so it does make a huge difference. — Olivier5
Whatever happened to the long term? If Ukraine agrees to keeping the present government, staying out of NATO "forever" (who would have thought Putin would request to join NATO?) and peacekeepers to babysit the Neo-Nazis, Ukraine will be a hugely advantageous position: supported by the world, and with Russia under crippling sanctions, rocked by protests. Who could ask for more. Maybe they will — FreeEmotion
Because defense is much easier than attack. — Olivier5
They contradict themselves constantly — Olivier5
Do you have good reasons to mistrust them? — Olivier5
So with your delusional logic then I guess the Grenadians and Cubans attacked the US in 1983 — ssu
And you've dodged the question - does Ukraine have a choice? — Isaac
What choice does Ukraine have, Isaac? Roll over and give more territory to Russia? — ssu
It already gave up it's nuclear deterrent and believed a piece of paper that Russia signed, so I guess those kind of mistakes it shouldn't do. — ssu
You explain me what the choice was for Ukraine, when an apparently not so well anymore Russian dictator accuses an administration made of a centrist party and lead by President of Jewish ancestry being neo-nazis, that are committing a genocide of which there isn't any trace of and then Russia is pursuing a de-nazification in the country which it has invaded. — ssu
I think more preferable would be to ask what are the choices for Russia now. — ssu
I think it is good advice to point out that certain sources are untruthful, such as FOX for instance. Someone who generally trusts FOX, unwittingly, could be made a little more cautious if you alert him — Olivier5
How do you spot a liar, usually? It's not rocket science, just check some verifiable facts mentioned in the source against the reference material you happen to accept. — Olivier5
Check against the Guardian, le Monde, El Pais, Die Zeit, Aljazeera... (not too disreputable sources) — Olivier5
You straight admitted that you don't care about the truth. — frank
Word of the Year 2016 (Oxford Languages), post-truth (Lexico) — a cultural failure.
Actually just a failure. — jorndoe

Let me get this straight: you think nobody ever lies, or that journalists never consciously lie in their reporting — Olivier5
