↪boethius ... which has nothing to do with the use of nukes against Ukraine. Thank you for your constant obfuscation. — Olivier5
Until or if Putin can threaten/force Sweden/Finland sufficiently, they'll be parts of NATO defense, unlike Ukraine. As it stands, I don't think Putin and team really have the extra resources. Rattling the nukes brought some additional attention onto them. (Might not be the best for them?) Russia threatens, invades Ukraine, threatens a bit, dismisses a bit, two other neighbors set to join NATO, ... — jorndoe
WWII is Putin's favorite analogy. He sees Nazis everywhere.I just explained exactly how it had to do with Nukes. I can explain it again if you want.
Already the threat of nuclear war precluded NATO boots on the ground and planes in the air (the common sense way to "defend freedom and democracy" a la WWII, which is the West's own preferred analogy). — boethius
Of the arms and intelligence support Ukraine has gotten ... why only HIMARS now? ... and not literally the first day of the war?
The answer is because HIMARS can be introduced now maintaining a Russian win.
The most annoying part of that hypocrisy is that Western media frame the "expansion" of NATO Eastward as not-an-expansion as it was just countries joining out of their own volition, NATO agency and planning had nothing to do with it. But ... again ... why not Ukraine? They wanted to be let in too? — boethius
But this has nothing to do with the use of nuclear weapons against Ukraine. The reason Biden is being cautious is because he wants to avoid WWIII, i.e. a war between Russia and NATO.
I think even you can understand the difference between WWIII and the use of nukes against Ukraine. Those are two very different hypotheses. — Olivier5
That's the paranoid answer, but it's not the only one. — Olivier5
The funniest part of your hypocrisy is that you see NATO as not expansionist enough. You are asking: why don't they expand to Ukraine? — Olivier5
You're bat shit crazy. — Olivier5
Today, we hear that they want to defeat us on the battlefield. What can you say? Let them try. We have heard many times that the west wants to fight us to the last Ukrainian. This is a tragedy for the Ukrainian people, but it seems that everything is heading towards this. — Vladimir Putin (Jul 8, 2022)
Russia’s potential is so great that only a small portion of it is being used in the special operation. — Dmitry Peskov (Jul 8, 2022)
If the west doesn’t want talks to take place but wishes for Ukraine to defeat Russia on the battlefield – because both views have been expressed – then perhaps there is nothing to talk about with the west. — Sergei Lavrov (Jul 8, 2022)
The reporter had asked a number of Ukrainians what they thought of statements like those quoted, and they all just shrugged at them, responding that nothing coming out of those people can be trusted. — jorndoe
"special operation" = (attempted) land-grab
The Ukrainians still want the invaders to leave. Ukraine has supporters that Russia doesn't. What Putin and Peskov nonchalantly call "the battlefield" is Ukraine. Putin's team went theatrical.
what, challenging "the west" to shoot it out on "the battlefield"? Boasting military prowess? Walking out on a top meeting? Shutting down talks? All the while bombing the Ukrainians and announcing a larger "special operation"...? :D Get real. There's been comments in the thread already. — jorndoe
Though, I don't think the idea of a "midnight deal" with Ukraine would have been very realistic. — Tzeentch
Ukraine is one of Russia's primary foreign policy interests - the country and its institutions are likely soaked with Russian intelligence operatives. — Tzeentch
Furthermore, NATO is at least on paper a defensive alliance. While the United States is by far the most dominant partner in the alliance, such a move would greatly damage NATO's legitimacy even to its own members. — Tzeentch
For the United States and Ukraine to enter into a pact bilaterally I think is equally unlikely, not to mention not very convincing. — Tzeentch
Second, Ukraine is on Russia's doorstep, whereas 9,000 kilometers and an ocean seperate Ukraine and the United States. In the unlikely event that the United States would commit to defending Ukraine with conventional means, by the time it arrives the battle would have been over. The Baltic States suffer from the same strategic problem. — Tzeentch
Come to think on it, I'd have liked further comments on...This stuff isn't floating in a vacuum.
Unfortunately, Streetlight is out, and it's a while back. :meh:Anyone who didn't think from the get-go that this was always about China in the long run has not been paying attention. — Streetlight
Must the thread really be reset ever so often (⇒ repetition)? — jorndoe
why not take it to the negotiation table? — jorndoe
Leonid Volkov (Alexei Navalny chief of staff) opines (Jul 17, 2022):
Ignoring the usual political slant, I see a couple of worthwhile points. By the way, the reduction-to-chess-game misses the killings and bombing. — jorndoe
Putin sends in the cannon fodder. If they're shot at, then bombs away. Repeat. Don't forget a few extra bombs for good measure. — paraphrasing Volkov
Putin wants as much of Ukraine as he can get away with — jorndoe
there are trends and reasons that Putin + team aren't looking for peace. — jorndoe
(OK, I did a repeat/copy/paste :smile:)trends, moves and shakes, ongoing developments, extending what's happened already, directions, [...], from Putin bullshitting the gullible to the Ukrainian "nobody" on the street shrugging and babbling (actually present on the ground)
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