Several US generals have commented that... — ssu
If we French start to bomb Corsica to dust, NATO will not intervene to stop us. It's not its role. — Olivier5
So... that leaves you getting your information from the Russians. Right. :snicker:If we're going to even attempt any real assessment of what's going in, we're going to need to do better than taking the intelligence of either the Ukrainians (with a massive security incentive to lie), or the US (with a massive financial incentive to lie), as our basis. — Isaac
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is a violation of its territorial integrity and of the Charter of the United Nations.
It must end for the sake of the people of Ukraine, Russia, and the entire world.
I visited Moscow and Kyiv with a clear understanding of the realities on the ground.
I entered an active war zone in Ukraine with no immediate possibility of a national ceasefire and a full-scale ongoing attack on the east of the country.
Before the visit, the Ukrainian government issued an appeal to the United Nations and to me personally – expressed publicly by the Deputy Prime Minister – regarding the dire plight of civilians in the devastated city of Mariupol and specifically the Azovstal plant.
In my meeting with President Putin, I therefore stressed the imperative of enabling humanitarian access and evacuations from besieged areas, including first and foremost, Mariupol.
I strongly urged the opening of a safe and effective humanitarian corridor to allow civilians to reach safety from the Azovstal plant.
A short time later, I received confirmation of an agreement in principle.
We immediately followed up with intense preparatory work with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) along with Russian and Ukrainian authorities.
Our objective was to initially enable the safe evacuation of those civilians from the Azovstal plant and later the rest of the city, in any direction they choose, and to deliver humanitarian aid.
I am pleased to report on some measure of success.
Together, the United Nations and the ICRC are leading a humanitarian operation of great complexity – both politically, and in terms of security.
It began on 29 April and has required enormous coordination and advocacy with the Russian Federation and Ukrainian authorities.
So far, two safe passage convoys have been successfully completed.
In the first, concluded on 3 May, 101 civilians were evacuated from the Azovstal plant along with 59 more from a neighbouring area.
In the second operation, completed last night, more than 320 civilians were evacuated from the city of Mariupol and surrounding areas.
A third operation is underway – but it is our policy not to speak about the details of any of them before they are completed to avoid undermining possible success.
It is good to know that even in these times of hyper-communications, silent diplomacy is still possible and is sometimes the only effective way to produce results.
So far, in total, nearly 500 civilians found long-awaited relief, after living under relentless shelling and scarce availability of water, food, and sanitation.
The evacuees have shared moving tales with UN staff. Mothers, children and frail grandparents spoke of their trauma. Some were in urgent need of medical attention.
I hope that the continued coordination with Moscow and Kyiv will lead to more humanitarian pauses to allow civilians safe passage from the fighting and aid to reach those in critical need.
We must continue to do all we can to get people out of these hellscapes.
That's what he didn't say, troll.1. So, according to you, invading Cyprus, Syria, Iraq, is "internal politics" of Turkey? Invading, occupying, and annexing Tibet is "internal politics" of China? In that case, invading Ukraine is "internal politics" of Russia! — Apollodorus
On the contrary, it is you who misinterpreted my position. You need (1) to show that you correctly understand others before blaming them for misunderstanding your incomprehensible statements and (2) make sure that your statements are comprehensible. — Apollodorus
From what I see, you seem to be some kind of Nazi who thinks people should shut up unless they think and speak exactly like you. — Apollodorus
The fact is that when I said "as far as I am concerned", I meant that it makes no difference to me personally, as it doesn't affect me in any way whatsoever. The conflict might put up my energy bills, but other than that, it makes no difference to me. Hence I have no personal interest in "spreading pro-Russian propaganda" as you falsely claimed. — Apollodorus
As a more general principle, my position has always been absolutely clear, i.e., every country and continent should belong to its rightful owners. If you were prepared to give Tibet back to the Tibetans, North Cyprus back to the Cypriots, Kurdistan back to the Kurds, Germany back to the Germans, etc., then you might have some credibility. But as it is, you haven’t. IMO if you've got a rule or law, you must apply it consistently, not arbitrarily, otherwise it's just a joke. Unfortunately, there is no consistency whatsoever in the NATO position — Apollodorus
On the contrary, it is you who misinterpreted my position. You need (1) to show that you correctly understand others before blaming them for misunderstanding your incomprehensible statements and (2) make sure that your statements are comprehensible.
— Apollodorus
As for (1) you didn’t show me that I misunderstood you before I showed you that you did misunderstand me, and repeatedly so. Therefore it’s you who needs to show me that you correctly understand me before complaining about my misunderstandings (and you didn’t show me any of my misunderstandings yet!). As for (2), I can’t make sure my statements are comprehensible to you if you conveniently chop them to build a straw man argument. — neomac
1. So, according to you, invading Cyprus, Syria, Iraq, is "internal politics" of Turkey? Invading, occupying, and annexing Tibet is "internal politics" of China? In that case, invading Ukraine is "internal politics" of Russia! — Apollodorus
2. NATO did intervene in Serbia who wasn't threatening any NATO members. — Apollodorus
3. NATO members are intervening in Ukraine by supplying arms, training, intelligence, propaganda, etc. even though the conflict is no threat to NATO.
4. If NATO sees Russia as a "threat", Russia can see NATO as a "threat".
Take your own advice: stop cheering the Russians and enlist on their side. Then you get to rape and torture innocent folks yourself rather than vicariously. — Olivier5
So... that leaves you getting your information from the Russians. Right. :snicker: — ssu
But I guess some will just continue with NATO bashing and telling how evil the US is. — ssu
So... that leaves you getting your information from the Russians. Right. :snicker: — ssu
the matter for us laymen is which narrative to pick in the absence of overwhelming evidence. — Isaac
Or then you could listen to what the UN Secretary-General says: — ssu
The people cheerleading Ukrainians to fight to the last, either as a fanatical gesture or bravery or then useful proxy to US power, which definitely seems your position, — boethius
You also could try and pay better attention to what I am saying — Olivier5
Hence that fog doesn't mean that a) we cannot say anything about the war, b) everything said is a lie and c) we'll have a more clear understanding of the conflict later.We've already gone over this: it's entirely possible both sides are engaged in propaganda and we should be skeptical of both. Once upon a time you mentioned yourself repeatedly the fog of war. — boethius
I don't think this is so. I think both the Ukrainians and the West are thinking of "winning" in the sense that Russia has to submit to not perfect terms for it. There not going to enlarge the war to Russia proper. And there are genuine incentives for the West to have a peace deal in this war (or at least an armstice) starting from the 11 milloin refugees Ukraine has now. Biden and other Western leaders understand that there's no appetite for a decades long war in order just to keep Russia bleeding.3. Providing enough arms and information support to maintain a total war situation in Ukraine ... but not intervention that would have a chance of actually defeating the Russians, for the sake of justifying sanctions that likewise won't defeat the Russians but happen to make American fracking profitable for the first time ... and maybe for the long term! — boethius
I don't think this has happened. Nobody promised a "no fly zone", especially with NATO participation.4. Encouraging Zelensky to reject peace terms (both through teasing things like a "no fly zone" — boethius
Really?This is no longer WWII or the cold war where there is some transcendental value (such as freedom and democracy) that the West represents and can excuse some "bad apples" and "mistakes" happening. — boethius
there are genuine incentives for the West to have a peace deal in this war (or at least an armstice) starting from the 11 milloin refugees Ukraine has now. Biden and other Western leaders understand that there's no appetite for a decades long war in order just to keep Russia bleeding. — ssu
there are several lines of evidence that suggest that the U.S. is inhibiting a diplomatic solution in Ukraine.
Ambassador Chas Freeman, who served 30 years as a U.S. diplomat, told me that “it is the opposite of statecraft and diplomacy that the U.S. is not involved in any negotiations.”
“At best,” he said, “the U.S. has been absent and, at worst, implicitly opposed.”
Biden officials told the Post that they don’t see a “clear end to the military phase of this conflict,” meaning the US expects a long, bloody insurgency in Ukraine, and is willing to support it.
"We need to be prepared for the long term," Stoltenberg told a youth summit in Brussels. "There is absolutely the possibility that this war will drag on and last for months and years."
Assault on Ukraine is quite similar to the assault on my country in 1939 by the Soviet Union. Unprovoked and not well thought. — ssu
You guys don't pay attention. — Olivier5
Your entire contribution to this thread consists of debasing insults to anyone critical of the West — Isaac
They behave like automatons. It's hard to have a conversation with bots saying "NATO caca" over and over again. — Olivier5
Biden and other Western leaders understand that there's no appetite for a decades long war in order just to keep Russia bleeding. — ssu
It's causing inflation. That's not good. — frank
Page not found.Look at the US's actual investment in a peace deal — Isaac
Your total irrelevance to what people actually write has been noted by many.Your persistent resort to whataboutism has been noted already. — Isaac
It's the Ukrainians and Putin who can stop this war.The US is on record as wanting to give Russia 'it's own Afghanistan' in Ukraine. It will joyfully let Russia bleed there, along with the Ukrainians upon whom that blood will fall. — Streetlight
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