Except that is not what you are advocating.
You believe NATO should get to expand and interfere all it wants because they're "the good guys", and when another nation reacts you cry foul. — Tzeentch
Whatever your position is, it's hopelessly confused.
What?Voluntariness is not a factor in this. — Tzeentch
Actually Cuba didn't join the Warsaw Pact.Cuba also voluntarily joined a USSR-led military alliance. It made no difference to the United States. — Tzeentch
Really, Tzeentch, really?You seem to be using a different definition of the term than what I found.
By that definition Europe is essentially Finlandized by the United States. — Tzeentch
(see here)Russia has "no problem" if Finland and Sweden join NATO, President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday. "We don't have problems with Sweden and Finland like we do with Ukraine," Putin told a news conference in the Turkmenistan capital of Ashgabat.
Your genuinely saying that voluntariness of joining organizations by independent countries isn't a factor? — ssu
Actually Cuba didn't join the Warsaw Pact.
And it did make the difference that the US didn't and hasn't invaded Cuba. The US has Guantanamo Bay base since in 1903 newly independent Cuba and the US made lease agreement, which has no fixed expiration date. Yet Cuba hasn't been invaded by the US. It surely has tried all kinds of ways to overthrow the regime of Fidel Castro, yet Cuban deterrence has worked. — ssu
So you copy paste what wikipedia says Finlandization and then say I have opposing views about Finlandization? — ssu
Yet if you argue to be a realist, you should observe that the tactics that the Soviet Union held to it's part of Europe didn't work so well. The Warsaw Pact collapsed. You can make a throne from bayonets, but it's difficult to sit on them. The only actual operations the Warsaw pact did was to attack and occupy one of it's members. That's not a "personal fancie".Yep. In geopolitics power, not our personal fancies, is what matters. That's the realist point of view - not because a realist likes it that way, but because a realist recognizes that's how geopolitics works. — Tzeentch
It really isn't at all contradictory. What I described was just facts what was included with the Soviet Union in "refraining from opposing the former's foreign policy rules". That's what they did, hence there's no contradiction.Your use of the term "Finlandization" seemed contradictory to what I believe the term means. — Tzeentch
They have quite a lot more to say than with being under Russian sphere of influence, that's for sure.Do you think European countries, being part of NATO, are free to pursue their own foreign policy if it conflicts with United States' interests? I can assure you they're not. — Tzeentch
Yet if you argue to be a realist, you should observe that the tactics that the Soviet Union held to it's part of Europe didn't work so well. The Warsaw Pact collapsed. You can make a throne from bayonets, but it's difficult to sit on them. The only actual operations the Warsaw pact did was to attack and occupy one of it's members. That's not a "personal fancie". — ssu
Whereas the US empire by listening to Europeans themselves and favoring for example European integration has worked well: Europeans like to have the US here. — ssu
What I described was just facts what was included with the Soviet Union in "refraining from opposing the former's foreign policy rules". — ssu
For some reason you think that it's equivalent to be under US spehere of influence and under Russian / Soviet sphere of influence. — ssu
They have quite a lot more to say than with being under Russian sphere of influence, that's for sure.
Just look at Türkiye. — ssu
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin instructed the Finance Ministry to initiate an agreement on providing financial assistance to Abkhazia and South Ossetia. — Russian government will conclude an agreement on financial aid with Abkhazia and South Ossetia (Mar 2, 2009)
Abkhazia to receive 2.36 billion rubles ($68 million) from the Russian federal budget and South Ossetia 2.8 billion rubles ($81 million)
[...]
South Ossetia would also receive 8.5 billion rubles ($246 million) to rebuild — Russia signs financial aid deals with Abkhazia, South Ossetia-2 (Mar 17, 2009)
Yes. That's a really good point, Tzeentch. By working for other countries even a bit, guess what, those countries do value the effort!I think the Europeans mainly like not having to spend much on defense. — Tzeentch
Yeah.But I suppose your point is that US - European relations have been more cooperative, and thus better. That's a moral judgement, and realists don't deal in moral judgements. — Tzeentch
Actually the government is fully aware what the people think. Hope the media follows just what happens later. I think they will do that.It turns out that Finnish people are not quite the irredeemable cowards and supporters of Kurdish genocide that their government is:
"According to a recent survey in Finland, only 14 percent of the Finns agree that legislative changes ought to be made in order to get Turkey’s support for accession to the NATO alliance. 70 percent of respondents said that they do not support making concessions to Turkey.
The results of the survey, conducted by Helsingin Sanomat, have been released on Monday, one day before the leaders of Finland and Sweden are set to meet with Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to convince him to drop his objections to their membership of NATO." — Streetlight
Protecting and helping all those Russians in other countries is a burden, but a burden which Putin's gallantly takes on, right?The thread having established that everyone is evil, maybe we should include some positive things as well?
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin instructed the Finance Ministry to initiate an agreement on providing financial assistance to Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
— Russian government will conclude an agreement on financial aid with Abkhazia and South Ossetia (Mar 2, 2009)
Abkhazia to receive 2.36 billion rubles ($68 million) from the Russian federal budget and South Ossetia 2.8 billion rubles ($81 million)
[...]
South Ossetia would also receive 8.5 billion rubles ($246 million) to rebuild
— Russia signs financial aid deals with Abkhazia, South Ossetia-2 (Mar 17, 2009) — jorndoe
Türkiye is not in the United States' sphere of influence. — Tzeentch
Umm...but isn't in a NATO country? — ssu
My point has always been that from a realist perspective Russia's actions were entirely predictable, that the United States were aware of this and provoked Russia intentionally, perhaps thinking they were bluffing. — Tzeentch
From your realist perspective, this would be a smart strategy to follow, don't you think? Draw Russia into a costly conflict, and bleed it. — Olivier5
It's absolutely foolish, from a European perspective and from an American perspective.
The United States needs to shift its focus to China, which is an actual peer competitor that can challenge the United States' position as hegemon. Not Russia. ... — Tzeentch
This scenatio seems too pessimistic to me. China has historically been a peaceful nation, ... — Olivier5
Historically, China has waged war almost continuously in what are now China's borders. — Benkei
If China poses no immediate security threat, if they are not going to invade anyone militarily, why 'pivot to China'? — Olivier5
But so far their power is mainly economic. — Olivier5
A pivot to China doesn't simply mean a military pivot, since the United States does not have only military means. It would mean the United States would shift it's entire focus away from Europe towards Asia, military, economic, political, etc. — Tzeentch
You could say something like: if China rises to hegemony peacefully, what's the problem?
To which I would answer: what makes you think the United States is willing to peacefully give up its position as hegemon? — Tzeentch
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