Strangely you seem to think that no other reasons are in play especially in security policy, but everything is just the machinations of the banks and the powers at be. — ssu
If they maintain bases all over the world, there isn't a measurable decrease in power. — Manuel
I agree. There really are human rights concerns, but the real engine behind it is the need to crack Russia open for neoliberal exploitation. The notion that naive idealism is up against realpolitik here is overlooking this. — frank
A global presence does not indicate aggression. — frank
The US has been the world's peace keeper since WW2. As it declines, there will be turmoil. — frank
If we think about it, Ukraine has nothing to do with the North Atlantic or NATO, and Russian occupation or control of Ukraine poses absolutely no threat to the national security of America or Britain. — Apollodorus
Correct. It's a well-known fact (or ought to be) that Western, especially Anglo-American, interests have always been after Russia's resources. — Apollodorus
It was England's and America's "liberal" capitalist monopolists who supported a socialist revolution in Russia so that they could bring the whole country under their economic and financial control. — Apollodorus
The problem with the average American is (a) that he or she has zero understanding or knowledge of international relations and (b) they don’t care about other countries as long as US foreign policy serves the perceived interests of America - which are usually the interests of the political and economic establishment rather than of the American people. — Apollodorus
The US doesn't need Russia's resources. — frank
The British and French established banks and industry in Russia prior to revolution. The same British and French were preoccupied with a world war when the shit hit the fan. After the revolution, western Europe had no Influence over events in Russia. — frank
But you said the Russian revolution was supported by American and British capitalists. Why do you think that? — frank
It isn't about what I think as I wasn't there. It's about what historians say. :smile: — Apollodorus
They supported Kerensky's socialist revolution of February/March 1917 but the communists (Bolsheviks) under Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin staged a coup in October/November and took over. — Apollodorus
The initial revolution was just social breakdown in St Petersburg. There were a number of reasons for it. Western capitalists did not instigate it and were never in control of what happening. — frank
but the real engine behind it is the need to crack Russia open for neoliberal exploitation. — frank
Well, historians call it "February/March Revolution" not "just social breakdown". — Apollodorus
No one says Western capitalists were in control. But they created the conditions that facilitated the February revolution, they financed anti-czarist propaganda in Russia, they provided Kerensky with loans, etc. — Apollodorus
You stated the reasons yourself:
but the real engine behind it is the need to crack Russia open for neoliberal exploitation. — Apollodorus
The October Revolution along with the February Revolution comprised the Russian Revolution of 1917, and led to the creation of the world’s first socialist state and the formation of the Soviet Union in 1922.
Neoliberalism is post WW2. And there couldn't be any explanation of Russia until after 1987. — frank
Neoliberalism is post WW2. And there couldn't be any explanation of Russia until after 1987. — frank
The motives were the same: to open up Russia to Western exploitation. The czar was opposed to this and that's why he had to go .... — Apollodorus
The Western liberals wanted economic and social reforms that went far beyond what the czar was prepared or able to accept. — Apollodorus
Likewise, had British and American liberal capitalists been happy with the czar, they wouldn't have supported revolutionary movements in Russia. — Apollodorus
In August 1914, J.P. Morgan & Co. partner Henry Davison (1867-1922) travelled to London to arrange a deal with the Bank of England that made his bank the official sponsor of all credits to the British government floated on American markets. J.P. Morgan & Co. underwrote $1.5 billion in war loans to London over the course of the war. As an investment bank, Morgan was not the largest American bank, but it was the most well-connected. It had already floated credit for London once before, during the Boer War in 1900. In the fall of 1914, the US government initially barred Morgan from floating French government loans in New York, forcing Paris to look to the City of London for credits instead. However, by the spring of 1915, France too was funding itself on Wall Street. Once Russia also picked Morgan as the intermediary for its borrowings on the American market, the House of Morgan had become the credit-broker to the entire Entente. For its services to the alliance it obtained an 8.3 percent commission, which netted it over $200 million in profits.
Well, having the biggest nuclear arsenal in the World should deter that.Well, how about Russia's security when it is being surrounded by Nelson Rockefeller's NATO? — Apollodorus
But yet you do talk about Rockefeller's NATO. :smile:And I never said “everything is just the machinations of the banks and the powers at be”. That’s your own spin that you keep putting on it. — Apollodorus
And it's preposterous to think that the oil price is what it is because of the Ukraine crisis. There's many other things at play here. And just a while ago the future oil price was negative. In fact, the money is made from those fluctuations.The fact is that oil already stands at a seven-year high of more than $90 a barrel and top banks and oil companies are saying it may soon pass $100.
Obviously, someone is making an awful lot of money from the crisis and it is preposterous to try to deny it. — Apollodorus
If the West is just hyping a Russian attack, then there is a perfect answer to this: not to do anything. That's how the issue then goes away.So, the situation is far more complex than you are alleging, and not everything can be “Russia’s fault”. — Apollodorus
I just noticed that in another post you made a distinction between February and October, stating that Western capitalists supported the former but not the latter. — jamalrob
In any case, historical evidence suggests that there was some foreign involvement in bringing about the two revolutions. This does NOT mean that Western powers “controlled” anything. Only that they supported the groups that played a key role in the overthrow of the czars. — Apollodorus
In fact, the events of February and November 1917 — Apollodorus
But yet you do talk about Rockefeller's NATO — ssu
As a result, text books published decades ago are not always entirely up to date and this may lead to new data being dismissed as "conspiracy theory". — Apollodorus
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