Have a vote? You mean like China did before annexing Tibet? — Apollodorus
NATO works by constantly expanding and not giving a dime about anyone else. Plus, it was created by America, and it is run by America in America's interests. But maybe things look differently when seen from the Finnish outback ... — Apollodorus
it is run by America in America's interests. — Apollodorus
Fragmentational dilution of my writing like this becomes a childish way of discussing a topic. I won't fall for cheap tricks like this, ugh... — Christoffer
Wait, are you using opinion pieces as sources? Not factual sources for your own inductional reasoning? — Christoffer
If you're gonna use sources to argue a point, it becomes extremely skewed if the sources are merly opinion pieces or far-leaning political voices. — Christoffer
Has nothing to do with the events today or the acts of Putin. — Christoffer
What is your point? What is your actual argument? — Christoffer
Neither connected to Putin's reasoning for invading Ukraine — Christoffer
The independent media outlets broadcasting live news with experts from the IRES Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies, have a bit more validity to them than your biased opinion pieces that you linked to. — Christoffer
Like this: — Christoffer
Then, if going with articles that are less opinion pieces — Christoffer
Since we all know that it is the latter, — Christoffer
What is the advantage of blaming them for everything like you do? — Christoffer
You aren't interested in any balanced view or multi-reason answer. — Christoffer
this is all Putin. — Christoffer
A number of complex interrelated factors, one of which is US foreign policy, one of which is EU central banking, one of which is arms industry lobbying, one of which is the influence of multinational financial instruments... — Isaac
Neither connected to Putin's reasoning for invading Ukraine, other than you falling for his propaganda machine. — Christoffer
The major thing that you never ever seem to understand is that I've never said anything of Europe or US being "innocent". I'm just saying that your invented guilt of "the west" — Christoffer
You simply inflate the guilt of the west as being more influential and dismiss any notion of Putin's guilt. — Christoffer
What are Putin's intentions based on the history of his rule and rise to power? — Christoffer
Why does he actually feel threatened by NATO? — Christoffer
In practice, how does NATO expand itself? — Christoffer
Does Ukraine not have rights to its own independence? — Christoffer
Is Russia ruled by many or just one man (Putin), and if not one man, who shares the power and how? — Christoffer
Of course, the English (the "WASPs") were untouchable. There weren't even any pejorative terms for them. There is definitely an ingrained belief among European peoples that slavs are "lesser". I feel certain that western Europeans hate the idea of a strong slavic country, as Russia potentially represents, since it challenges their ingrained bias. — Joseph Zbigniewski
You can take it from me, that a young Polish boy growing up in anything but a Polish neighborhood "caught hell" on a daily basis, being continually assaulted with "dumb polack" — Joseph Zbigniewski
But he isn't delusional!!! I'm not sure where you see the illogicality here.Surely even you can see that trying to claim him as an expert when he agrees with you and delusional when he doesn't is utterly absurd. — Isaac
Like a proper democratic vote. That is what they should have had, not what they got, as precisely what I wrote. — Christoffer
It certainly occurs in England where there is prejudice not only toward "darkies" but also toward the Irish, the Russians, and above all, the Germans. — Apollodorus
Putin’s Motives and Russian Grand Strategy
Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine strategy is driven by three goals: survival, empire and legacy.
First and foremost, Putin sees the fate of Ukraine as an existential issue both for himself and for the authoritarian regime that he and his inner circle have gradually rebuilt over the past fifteen years. The Orange Revolution of 2004 was a deep shock to Putin because of the echoes it created in Russia and because Ukraine seemed to be on the brink of becoming a major source of longer-term “democratic diffusion” right on Russia’s long southwestern border. Fortunately for Putin, however, the luster of this revolution quickly wore off once its leaders gained office and failed to live up to their reformist promises. From the start there was infighting between Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko; reforms were postponed; the Ukrainian economy spiraled downward and corruption remained rampant.
By the time Yushchenko’s presidency ended in 2010, many voters had come to see Viktor Yanukovych as a preferable alternative. Yanukovich also reportedly benefited from substantial financial and “political technology” support from Moscow. For Putin, Yanukovych was a promising alternative to the western-oriented “Orange” leaders, since he seemed likely to maintain strong trade and financial ties with Russia, show proper deference towards Moscow and, above all, keep Ukraine out of NATO. But it turned out that too many Ukrainians were unwilling to follow the Putin/Yanukovich script.
When Yanukovich fled Kiev on February 21, it must have seemed to the Kremlin that a second wave of the Orange Revolution had taken control of Ukraine. Putin no doubt trembled with fury – but also with fear.
Putin’s second driving motive for going all out to reassert as much dominance as possible in Ukraine combines his goals of restoring a Russian empire and of burnishing his personal legacy. It is abundantly clear that Putin seeks to restore Russia to its former imperial glory, and in so doing to secure for himself a place in history as one of the greatest Russian leaders of all time. In a 2005 speech, Putin famously stated that “the breakup of the Soviet Union was the greatest geopolitical tragedy of the 20th century.”
Now we are seeing the next act in this tragedy playing out...
According to some analysts this has been a contributing factor to the failure of US-UK adventures in places like Iraq and Afghanistan — Apollodorus
What? I just asked you for sources to back up the claim that "this is all Putin". — Isaac
but then your response doesn't make any sense because I asked you about your treatment of the portion of blame the US and Europe must shoulder. If your phrase "this is all Putin" was merely rhetorical hyperbole, then the question remains unanswered. Why shoot down all the attempts to talk about the extent to which the US and Europe are culpable? — Isaac
Yes. I'm not an historian, nor a military strategist, so I don't consider myself to have the necessary skills to interpret raw historical documents and military pronouncements in context. I defer to experts to do that. — Isaac
The only reason I could make sense of is that you thought they shouldered no blame at all (hence my taking your "this is all Putin" at face value). If you don't think that, and you agree they share some of the blame, then why the constant shooting down of any discussion about it? — Isaac
All sources are biased — Isaac
I'm biased in favour of finding fault with my government and its allies. I've explained why I'm biased in that direction - they're the governments I have some little influence over and even if I'm wrong, it's still useful to keep them on their toes. So yes, all my sources are biased in that direction. Bias doesn't equate to lies, it's just a filter through which facts are viewed. — Isaac
That argument has been made elsewhere. You simply asked me for my sources so I supplied them. — Isaac
We don't 'all know' that at all. Are you seriously presenting the theory that NATO does absolutely nothing but sit back and wait for counties to join. That no diplomacy, deal-making, financial incentives, political alliances or cross-border events play any part at all in the process? — Isaac
Fuck's sake. I've repeated the argument a dozen times at least. Any solution involves the US so the US's prior behaviour in these kinds of events is relevant to a weighing up of how to use them and it's important that they are made as aware as possible that we're watching them, that they can't get away with the sort of shit they tried last time. — Isaac
See now you being obtuse. Are you now saying that there are no other reasons than Putin for the invasion? If so, then my request for sources is completely reasonable. You've provided no experts at all claiming that there's no other cause of this invasion than Putin himself. — Isaac
How so? — Isaac
That's an article from 2017 and all it shows is Putin's objectives, which no-one here has argued against. Your point is that "this is all Putin". again, without the 'all' claim, you're just saying that some of the cause is Putin's ideology, a claim absolutely no-one is disputing. I'm asking why you're pouring cold water on attempts to examine the role of the US and Europe. If you're not arguing that they have no part to play, then I can't see why you'd want to oppose discussion of that role. — Isaac
Either quote me blaming them for everything, or refrain from ascribing me views I've never espoused. — Isaac
You aren't interested in any balanced view or multi-reason answer.
— Christoffer
To remind you...
this is all Putin.
— Christoffer
Explain in what way that's a "balanced view or multi-reason answer". Or for that matter, when you say... — Isaac
That doesn't sound like someone who seeks any answer based on facts, that sounds like someone who can't agree with "this is all Putin" when that could very well be a sound conclusion for this topic. You, not wanting that to be a conclusion because you think that is too simple, is irrelevant.I'm biased in favour of finding fault with my government and its allies. I've explained why I'm biased in that direction - they're the governments I have some little influence over and even if I'm wrong, it's still useful to keep them on their toes. — Isaac
A number of complex interrelated factors, one of which is US foreign policy, one of which is EU central banking, one of which is arms industry lobbying, one of which is the influence of multinational financial instruments... — Isaac
Neither connected to Putin's reasoning for invading Ukraine, other than you falling for his propaganda machine.
— Christoffer
If none of those factors come into play, then what exactly are the 'multi-reasons' to which you refer? — Isaac
How can the guilt of the west be invented if they are not innocent? — Isaac
Again, please don't just assign views to me without sources. Where have I dismissed any notion of Putin's guilt? — Isaac
I gather it's a combination of a distaste for democracy and an unwillingness to cede strategic advantage which could be leveraged to obstruct economic expansion. — Isaac
A combination of the extant global threats, diplomacy, political deals and direct advocacy. — Isaac
Yes — Isaac
No. I can't see how that could even be possible, let alone plausible. I suspect, like most tyrants he's surrounded by a cabal of associates who benefit from mutual objectives. — Isaac
Russia seems to have nothing to offer its clients but total economic stagnation (per capita, Russians have fallen behind China, in absolute terms, the economy of Russia is now smaller than Canada). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yep. That's why you are campaigning so hard for China to give Tibet back to the Tibetans, or for Turkey to return North Cyprus .... — Apollodorus
And of course NATO is run by America. Everyone knows that. It isn't my fault that the news hasn't made it to the Finnish outback yet ... — Apollodorus
Most nations have had trade deals and good relations with Russia, up until Putin's aggressions started in 2014. If you view the world as a "we against them", which Putin seems to do, of course you are threatened. But that doesn't mean that you actually are threatened, it means you are delusional in thinking- and acting accordingly. — Christoffer
We can also turn this around. If as many in here are arguing, NATO is interesting in just pushing east and threatening Russia, why didn't they just welcome Ukraine with open arms? It doesn't really fit with the "aggressive NATO" narrative many write about in here. — Christoffer
This is still not to show how much greater they are, but instead an interest of a superpower to be an economic superpower. This is done by the US, Russia and China while smaller nations with power also tries to gain power through it. Everyone does it — Christoffer
. An unstable region could automatically lead to conflict with NATO if that nation joins — Christoffer
The difference is that Russia has an authoritarian leader who openly speaks of the "empire", who by force tries to claim land and increase that empire's borders. — Christoffer
There is an anti-Slavic nationalism that has become so deeply ingrained in Western culture — Joseph Zbigniewski
President Joe Biden was back to declaring that Russia was “sitting on top of an economy that has nuclear weapons and oil wells and nothing else.” — Foreign Affairs
While Ukraine wants to protect their history and sovereignty, — javi2541997
Kremlin sources have revealed. — Olivier5
Vladimir Putin has become “deeply worried” about his strategy after learning that Donald J. Trump called him smart, Kremlin sources have revealed. — Olivier5
I may be misinterpreting what you are saying, but from what I read from your post but it seems you are in some part agreeing with Putin's actions. If that is what your position is, I will agree with the idea that Putin for the most part seems rational and may have his reasons to invade Ukraine as he has beyond just trying to return Russia in some way back to it's former USSR glory days, but Putin must have known that the US, Europe, and the rest of our allies can not allow just sit on our hands as his forces invade Ukraine and act in may ways the same way they did before the end of the Cold War.The same way the British invaded 80% (invaded or otherwise acquired) of the world? Just want to clarify that the King or Kings of England whoever they were was, " an authoritarian leader who openly speaks of the "empire", who by force tries to claim land and increase that empire's borders". That would be consistent. The same way the Spanish, Portuguese, Germans and others created empires? Maybe Putin is living in the past.
The United States has not threatened Sweden or Finland, but I think they may be the rare exceptions.
Putin is authoritarian, yes. He is also entitled to an opinion. If you say he should have found a better way to achieve his goals without invading a country and causing mayhem then that is valid. Maybe he is not smart enough to do that. Or maybe that was impossible. So what does he do? Give up on his goals?
Might as well ask the Ukrainians to stop fighting after 14 years and save lives. The fighting is going to stop sometime, so totaling up a high body count to make a point is one option, but I do not support it. — FreeEmotion
How does NATO expand? In practice, how does it expand? Are they forcing themselves into nations or are nations joining them?
And why are they joining NATO or want to join NATO? — Christoffer
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