Which position, again? — Olivier5
You cannot process evidence, though, so there'd be no point in giving it to you. — Olivier5
Uninformed opinions have zero value; and when taken as facts, they even have negative value (are detrimental). — Olivier5
Uninformed opinions have zero value; and when taken as facts, they even have negative value (are detrimental). So please stop putting out your uninformed opinion as if they were facts. Try to think before you post, and challenge yourself a bit. — Olivier5
Rest assured that no one is gambling a nuclear war. Biden has told Putin that nukes should not be considered, and Putin has said that nukes are not being considered. — Olivier5
my "side" is effectively saying that Ukraine is going to have to give up more land. That's not a palatable view, but I happen to think it is the least harmful one. — Manuel
As for evidence, there is a lot of it, which has been posted here by many members, including most importantly, NATO's decision to not implement a No-Fly Zone. — Manuel
I am aware that my "side" is effectively saying that Ukraine is going to have to give up more land. That's not a palatable view, but I happen to think it is the least harmful one. — Manuel
So what is making conceding lands instead of sacrificing people to free lands so unpalatable? — neomac
it is absurd to fear a Russian defeat in Ukraine, as you seem to do, on the ground that they will go nuclear if they lose. That idea implies that all non-nuclear nations must always agree to the will of nuclear nations. — Olivier5
Superpowers are perfectly capable of losing a war without using nukes. It has hapened before. Or did the USSR use nuclear weapons against Afghanistan? Did the US use nukes against Vietnam? — Olivier5
Each case is unique. History is not done in a laboratory with interchangeable mice, history is not replicable, and hence the course of history cannot be predicted. Nobody can tell with certainty, faced with situation X, that "based on what history tells us, the right move now is Y", because there never was in history a case that was exactly similar to X. — Olivier5
The issue you are pointing to, namely sacrificing "people for an uncertain... outcome", is less problematic from a narrative perspective, because they are fighting against an aggressor for dignity's sake. — Manuel
As I see it, by arguing that Russia will end up with a portion (if not all of it) of the seized territory, it is pointless to let civilians die with no realistic hope of retaining such lands — Manuel
one cannot say for certain, based on a historical analysis, that Russia will not use nukes in Ukraine. And there is zero historical precedent to say that Russia will certainly use nukes in Ukraine. — Olivier5
the specter of escalation — Manuel
absurd — Olivier5
What does dignity have to do with land to you? Consider the case of, Kurds and Palestinians, they are fighting against much greater regional foreign powers for having a land internationally acknowledged to them and sovereign (which never happened) for generations. Do they have any chance to win for something they "never" had? How many lives is their fight worth? — neomac
what were the chances for the Afghans to win a war against the second strongest army in the world of a state with nuclear weapons? What was that chance at the beginning of the war, in the middle of the war, and by the end of the war? Finally the Soviet Union withdraw and the Soviets' failure in the war is thought to be a contributing factor to the fall of the Soviet Union (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet%E2%80%93Afghan_War) — neomac
you are more than doing enough presenting a coherent position that seeks to de-escalate, none of this macho-bullshit. — Manuel
I have trouble understanding the war aims of the people who are argue "for Ukraine." — Manuel
As a matter of facts I posted it in response to one of your posts. — Olivier5
Superpowers are perfectly capable of losing a war without using nukes. It has hapened before. Or did the USSR use nuclear weapons against Afghanistan? Did the US use nukes against Vietnam? — Olivier5
If there’s no historical precedent for it, how high can this probability be? — Olivier5
The fact that your analysis is limited to two historical examples is the reason why you are not counted among that body of experts. — Isaac
Expert analysts consider the current set of immediate circumstances to present a small but significant risk of nuclear escalation. — Isaac
Some sort of rebuilding/reparations discussions would be appropriate: — jorndoe
their goals — Paine
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