A new cold war. Will it turn hot? According to Murphy's law everything that can go wrong will go wrong, no matter how cool played. It can always turn hot. Oh what save nuclear weapons keep the world! — EugeneW
Notice that now Russia is de facto quite attached to China. If Russia can't sell the gas and oil to Western Europe, where can Putin sell it? Yet China isn't a pariah state, it hasn't invaded Taiwan, so it has room to move. All this is an advantage to China.Not that I don't think a new Cold War is happening since it is with China, but that's already been going on for a while now. — Mr Bee
Notice that now Russia is de facto quite attached to China. If Russia can't sell the gas and oil to Western Europe, where can Putin sell it? Yet China isn't a pariah state, it hasn't invaded Taiwan, so it has room to move. All this is an advantage to China. — ssu
Ok, fair enough, Isaac.Mine's simple. I want to hold my government and its allies to account for their role in this, I want to make sure they don't get to play the white knight, saviours of the innocent. — Isaac
But I just can't fathom your aim. — Isaac
Putin won the war in Checnya. Putin has already used Chechen mercenaries in Donbass in 2014. And he has used them also in Syria.But I also wouldn't have thought they'd send in the Chechen forces either. — Count Timothy von Icarus
(From 2014)(REUTERS, 2014): Seasoned Chechen fighters, whose combat experience often dates back to the 1994-96 and 1999-2000 wars, fight on both sides in east Ukraine, adding to the complexity of a conflict in which the West says Russian troops are involved.
That would be bad. A real escalation of that war.If reports of Russia calling in Belorussian forces are true it shows that Russia is likely in more of a crisis than is apparent. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In 1945 the Red Army was sitting on half of Europe and made it clear it wouldn't be leaving. That was the impetus for NATO. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The US forces were there during the Cold War when the Warsaw Pact represented a much more substantial threat to Europe than Russia does today — Count Timothy von Icarus
More nations with nuclear weapons = more chances for misuse or theft. The US extends nuclear security as a means of reducing this risk. Notably, the Soviets acted similarly, not sharing nuclear technology widely. — Count Timothy von Icarus
yes, it is fair to say NATO doesn't need the US to stop Russia.
The watershed period in the development of modern Ukrainian national consciousness was the struggle for independence during the creation of the Ukrainian People's Republic from 1917 to 1921 - Wikipedia
The most revolutionary event of 1991 for Russia may not be the collapse of Communism, but the loss of something Russians of all political stripes think of as part of their own body politic, and near to the heart at that: Ukraine.
Zelensky agrees to talks Monday as Putin raises nuclear alert and West adds sanctions — CNN
In the case of Ukraine, the battle lines are already drawn: The opposition of the bulk of the population to any Russian puppet regime could not be clearer. Nearly 80% of the population identifies as Ukrainian and a similar proportion continues to support Ukrainian independence. Solid majorities favor joining both the EU and NATO and also have a low opinion of Russia; hardly a surprise given Russia's annexation of Crimea and sponsorship of violent separatists in the Donbas region.
Moreover, Ukrainians overthrew previous pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych in 2014 in large part because he intended to steer Ukraine into Russia's orbit and away from the European Union. — Fareed Zakaria
Why should someone in, say, Latin America or India care about this history?
So, I see your angle, but, by at this stage, too much is at stake. — Manuel
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