Many Europeans would just love to have a calm, peaceful and prosperous Russia, where entrepreneurs like Sergei Brin would stay and innovate new things. We don't have that with Russia. And many are eager to point out that Russia never has had democracy. — ssu
The reality is that Russia needs leaders that simply will tell the Russians themselves that the old empire is over and lost for good. That Russia is just like the United Kingdom today, a country that has lost it's empire and nothing and nobody will get it back. That if Russians want prosperity, it comes through trade (for which you need good relations with the rest of the World), innovation and not through conquest. — ssu
NATO, EU, US, Russia, China, ..., what about the Ukrainians? They're the ones getting bombed, not NATO, EU, US, China, or Russia; rather, the bombing + invasion is on Russia's hands.
Putin demanded they don't become a NATO member, which they've come to terms with (big sigh on their behalf goes here :smile:). — jorndoe
NATO doesn't expand. Nations voluntarily join or they don't, and there are requirements for joining that must be met. I'd consider the Crimea event or the current invasion an expansion. — Hanover
Fill the air with lies so nobody knows what to think. That's what the exploiters do to control the public. — frank
Or possibly, are you just such an arrogant twat that you think whatever you've heard simply must be true because, unlike all those other dupes, you couldn't possibly be being fed a narrative, you wouldn't fall for that. It's only everyone else who falls for that. — Isaac
Fill the air with lies so nobody knows what to think. That's what the exploiters do to control the public. — frank
They do it for profit. Some cumquats do it for free. :lol:
It's just damage control, I suspect. The idea is to combat the rapid depreciation of Mr Putin's allure in the West and elsewhere, as swift as the ruble's on the currency market. — Olivier5
His "allure" in the West hasn't "declined". — boethius
It is not for us to give Zelensky advice on what he should do on the ground, and at what point he should cut a deal. Instead, what we in the west should do is be clearer about what we can do. For example, we can't fast-track his country’s membership application for the EU. It is really quite dangerous to dangle this carrot in front of the Ukrainians at a time like this. France has been blocking North Macedonia and Albania's accessions. There is no way that the EU can fast-track Ukraine without fast-tracking the others.
...Another carrot we are dangling in front of the Ukrainians is weapons. Most of the German weapons that were promised never arrived. Future weapons deliveries are going to get harder because Nato does not want to confront the Russian military directly. Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, said that western arms convoys constitute a legitimate target in the war. We should expect western weapons supplies to Ukraine to dry up over time.
A stick that the Ukrainians are holding over our heads is the repeated assertion that after Putin takes Ukraine, we are next. I understand why he wants to spin that narrative. But it is not true. Putin’s radius of horror is limited to the Russo-sphere that is not in Nato: Ukraine, Georgia, maybe Moldova. Nato’s response to this war has surprised him, and it will be stationing an overwhelming number of troops and weapons on its eastern front. Invading a Nato country would be too risky, even for a man who takes calculated risks.
Putin can, however, win the war in Ukraine because he has the deadliest weapons, and is willing to target civilians. Once the western weapons supplies end, the odds in this war will once again favour Russia. Time is on Putin’s side. ... Europe can, and should, make a credible promise that we will welcome Ukrainian refugees in the millions. But our ability to help Ukraine win the war is limited. This is what we must tell Zelensky. The cheerleading has to stop.
Either you're unaware how the expansion happened or you're playing a semantic game. Which is it? Are you just taking issue with the word expand? — Benkei
Oh it has, among the European left and even in the extreme right. — Olivier5
...familiar plot? — Isaac
January First, is one of the most important days in their callender. It marks the birth of Stepan Bandera, the leader of the Ukrainian partisan forces during the second world war.
The rally was organized by the far right Svoboda Party. Protests marched amidst a river of torches, with signs saying "Ukraine above all else".
But for many in Ukraine and abroad, Bandera's legacy is controversial. His group, the organization of Ukrainian Nationalists sided with Nazi German forces [but fortunately we have modern Germany to tell us there's no connection!] before breaking with them later in the war. Western Historians also say that his followers carried out massacres of Polish and Jewish civilians.
[... interview with a guy explaining the importance of Stepan Bandera's birthday party ]
Ukraine is a deeply divided country, however, and many in its East and South consider the party to be extremist. Many observers say rallies like today's torch light march only add to this division [really?!?! you don't say...]. — BBC
We're Aryans, and we will rise again — totally not a neo-Nazi, according to the German government
Indeed, the Hitler-wannabe failed Anschlusser is being dragged in the mud by media the world over. — Olivier5
Well, I guess Putin would be the first person declaring that! He's just protecting ethnic Russians and welcomes them who want to join mother Russia. Just like Milosevic did for the Serbs. And uses his military on special military operations to stop a genocide perpetrated by neo-nazis.What if a Presidential candidate came forward stating that he would never engage in a war of conquest with any nation? — FreeEmotion
Step 11- millions of refugees resulting from the situation look to their noble benefactors for succor.
Step 12- noble benefactors: "fuck off, we've got a new crisis on the front page now" — Isaac
An oil embargo has been talked about by EU foreign ministers. For example Poland is openly demanding it and naturally many countries are opposing it. At least yet.If you're not actually stopping the flow of oil and gas ... you aren't really doing anything of significance against Russia's economy. — boethius
But yes, people genuinely believe this current New cycle won't go the way of terrorism, Covid, Syrira, Lybia, emails, grab em by the pussy, invasion of the world's superpower's capital buildings, Afghanistan, China pivot, migrants drowning all the time, opioids scandal, toxic male executives (guilty as charged though ... and this one will make a comeback, just like the Red Army!). — boethius
An oil embargo has been talked about by EU foreign ministers. For example Poland is openly demanding it and naturally many countries are opposing it. At least yet. — ssu
You have to make infrastructure investments and quite a dramatic realignment to stop Russian gas and oil trade. But it is totally possible. It simply cannot be done in weeks. But in few years, totally possible. — ssu
Agreed that some infrastructure adjustments would be needed if the EU stopped importing ... but I'm not sure by how much, as Russia has been investing massively in a fleet of nuclear icebreakers, which, I assume, is to be able to ship out oil and gas from the arctic; and that capacity may be already there, at least most of the year, if the tankers can just show up. — boethius
I think that Covid pandemic and it's restrictions did change your life a bit, and of course the current crisis will partly contribute to the run away inflation. Gas, petroleum, food will become more expensive. Something people will notice daily.But yes, people genuinely believe this current New cycle won't go the way of terrorism, Covid, Syrira, Lybia, emails, grab em by the pussy, invasion of the world's superpower's capital buildings, Afghanistan, China pivot, migrants drowning all the time, opioids scandal, toxic male executives (guilty as charged though ... and this one will make a comeback, just like the Red Army!). — boethius
but little old me on an obscure (no offense) internet forum mustn't stray for a second from 24/7 condemnation of him and him alone lest my failure be interpreted as tacit support and bring the whole project crashing down. I didn't realise I was so influential. — Isaac
Can you at least stop using obscene words like that all the time? I find it disgusting. — Olivier5
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