Meaning that there already has been a war going on since 2014.I'm not sure what the pre-existing war's got do with it — Isaac
Yet that doesn't justify Russia's actions. And when Russia has gone to war, it has been far more indifferent to civilian casualties as it is with it's own casualties. This can easily be seen from the war in Syria, Chechen Republic, Afghanistan. But that doesn't make then US a white knight.Pro-Western imperialist agendas cause more death and misery than this war will - ten times over. — Isaac
Of course. But note that sometimes they are correct in what they say: Russia's critique of NATO's actions in Kosovo or Libya are fair and understandable as is now Biden's critique of Putin's attack.Russia are not a crazy one-off Marvel bad guy which sprung out of nowhere. The US are not white knights who are going to come in on their chargers and save the world — Isaac
It's only the "as much" which I reject to as basically already Ukraine wasn't going to become NATO and the simple fact IS THAT IF PUTIN WOULDN'T HAVE TERRITORIAL DESIRES IN UKRAINE, UKRAINE WOULDN'T WANT TO BE IN NATO. Remember that prior 2014 Ukrainians genuinely thought of Russians as their brothers. Vladimir Putin was very popular then in Ukraine.This is an inevitable conflict, caused as much by Western provocation and puppet-mastery as it is by Russian lunacy and stubbornness. — Isaac
Presumably it's still in our favour if our side "wins". Whatever the fuck that means in this conflict. — Benkei
So, at least intellectually, all one can do is pick a (metanarrative) poison – Euro-American fentanyl or Russian novichok? — 180 Proof
I hope starting this war will be the start of the downfall of Putin. — ssu
If Ethiopia has made it so far, so will Russia.This is probably gonna be the start of the downfall of Russia overall if I'm being frank. — Mr Bee
China on Thursday morning denied Russia invaded Ukraine as it urged restraint from all sides.
Beijing refused to characterise Russia’s actions as an ‘invasion’ when prompted by foreign journalists but stopped short of publicly taking a side.
The comments are likely to fuel fears that China's growing links with Russia could help cement a new bipolar world order.
I'm not sure what the pre-existing war's got do with it — Isaac
Meaning that there already has been a war going on since 2014. — ssu
Yet that doesn't justify Russia's actions. — ssu
It doesn't make it OK to beat up someone who didn't attack you because another guy has done also in different occasions. Of course there are no white knights and evil entities, but simply to put it: imperialism is wrong. If countries have become independent, they really have had the motivation to become independent. And they have the right for it, you simply cannot make the case that Ukrainian independence is an "astro-turf" idea. Nobody ought to say that a country of 44 million is "artificial", hence I can annex territories from it. — ssu
the simple fact IS THAT IF PUTIN WOULDN'T HAVE TERRITORIAL DESIRES IN UKRAINE, UKRAINE WOULDN'T WANT TO BE IN NATO. — ssu
Again, it's not about whether it's OK, we're not standing in judgement. It's about what to do about it. — Isaac
Is Putin Mad? — Wayfarer
It's really a serious question, not just propaganda. — ssu
Except we're all (most?) consumers, campaigners and voters in countries on one side of this. We can join in a futile war cry at our enemies, who don't give a shit, or we can implore our side to do better. — Isaac
Things don't become facts by virtue of being in All Caps. They become facts by virtue of overwhelming evidence ruling out all contrary theories. Do you have such evidence? — Isaac
Even as a young teen I found it whimsical and totally attached from reality. Soviet propaganda, that is ….
It's not clear what will happen yet. — Manuel
The UK and our allies will respond decisively. Our mission is clear. Diplomatically, politically, economically, and eventually, militarily, this hideous and barbaric venture of Vladimir Putin must end in failure.
Ben Wallace, the defence secretary, said Britain will “work all day” to try to get the SWIFT international payment system “turned off for Russia”.
“Unfortunately the Swift system is not in our control - it’s not a unilateral decision,” he told BBC Radio 4.
Setting out how SWIFT is used “to move money around”, Mr Wallace said: “When you pay Russia for its gas, it probably goes through the Swift system, for example.
“It is based in Belgium. It has a number of partners that control it, or nation states. We want it switched off. Other countries do not. We only have so many options.”
One way to guarantee you don't understand what's going on is to dismiss the protagonist as "mad". Good way to sell newspapers; bad way to analyse events. — Baden
Yes. The obvious evidence is that Russia has annexed Crimea. Case closed.Do you have such evidence? — Isaac
Yes. And luckily the Baltic States did make a choice. Both Sweden and Finland sighed a relief when the Baltic countries joined NATO. The two countries surely aren't in any position to give any security guarantees to Baltic States (which was informally asked first by UK).We have a choice - what to do next. The only thing that matters is that choice, the consequences of it. — Isaac
1) Respect Belarusian, Kazakh and Ukrainian independence and sovereignty in the existing borders.
2)Refrain from the threat or the use of force against Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine.
3)Refrain from using economic pressure on Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine to influence their politics.
4)Seek immediate Security Council action to provide assistance to Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine if they "should become a victim of an act of aggression or an object of a threat of aggression in which nuclear weapons are used".
5)Refrain from the use of nuclear arms against Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine.
6)Consult with one another if questions arise regarding those commitment.
Hardly.Probably the real reason why Saddam Hussein had to be ousted was the flow of sanction busting black market oil. — Metaphysician Undercover
As Putin is obviously trying to reconstitute and reconquer the Russian (Soviet) Empire, he truly is the modern imperialist in the genuine sense.
— ssu
for some strange reason you keep blabbering on about "Russian empire"
— Apollodorus
You obviously don't understand the term "empire".
— Apollodorus
....
Putin ... clearly intends to restore some of the Russian Empire, which I believe he is perfectly entitled to do.
— Apollodorus
Presented without comment. — Baden
I agree that just saying "he's mad" is intellectually lazy and boring.It can be answered seriously, but it's an intellectually lazy, boring, and counterproductive line to take, especially when there are obviously identifiable reasons for what's going on. If you look at the situation in terms of pure power politics, Putin may well come out on top. If you make the mistake of searching for some moral element, then you shouldn't be analyzing politics at all because it will all look mad. — Baden
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