it seemed fruitful anyways to contemplate this criticism — boethius
It's possible all parties are now in a "it has to stop somehow" attitude. — boethius
Yes, it was, in the end, but I apologise for the misdirection. — Isaac
I think this is one of the oddities in considering modern war. All war is aimed at peace. All wars aim to have peace in which the borders (or political influence) have shifted. The aim is (was) never permanent war. So Russia should always be viewed as trying to gain a better bargaining position in the same power negotiations which preceded the war. As such, it would be insane not to be regularly 'testing the water' to see if they feel they've gained that position yet. — Isaac
Of equal, if not greater, interest to me are the methods they use to wield public opinion as s tool to this end. Hence the interest in the kinds of pro-US comment collected here. — Isaac
So we have to ask, I think, why the US are so uninterested in negotiations. That is the interesting question, and one best answered by looking at what they have to gain from a long drawn out war. — Isaac
This position ought be unaffected by whether we're winning or not, since at any time the opposing side might feel they have their best case (either because they've gained the advantage they wanted, or because they fear their current advantage may deteriorate). — Isaac
The city of Kherson is Russia. — Kirill Stremousov (reported May 13, 2022)
We've decided - the people of Kherson region have decided - that we need to hold a referendum and vote to join the Russian Federation. — Kirill Stremousov (reported Jul 21, 2022)
The authorities of unrecognized Transnistria once again reminded of their plans to secede from Moldova and join Russia. The so-called Foreign Minister of Transnistria, Vitaly Ignatiev, said on July 22 that Tiraspol’s external vector remains unchanged.
The Moldovan Bureau of Reintegration noted that international partners and constitutional authorities are in favor of a peaceful settlement of the conflict with respect for the territorial integrity of Moldova. That is, the main goal is the reintegration of the occupied region into a single country.
Moldova also called the stay of the Russian military contingent in Transnistria illegal and demanded its withdrawal.
“We have only one answer to this: everyone must respect the borders of the Republic of Moldova. The conflict must be resolved peacefully… We have heard a lot of declarations, and they all have approximately the same meaning. We hope that one day such statements will no longer be possible,” said President Maia Sandu.
Sorry, I referred to the wrong person, Jamal already noticed.How did I get embroiled in this conversation? — Christopher
Five people with knowledge of the Kremlin’s preparations said war planners around President Vladimir Putin believed that, aided by these agents, Russia would require only a small military force and a few days to force Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s administration to quit, flee or capitulate.
You know it's a frozen conflict from there existing a Bureau of Reintegration... — ssu
For the time being, yes.Yeah, and no one appears to be keen on reigniting it. Russia has its hands full with its present war, which it doesn't know how to end without losing face. It doesn't have a common border with Moldova. For an invasion it would need to establish a land corridor through southern Ukraine, which now appears to be a remote possibility. — SophistiCat
Transnistria is the least interested in upsetting the status quo. All these years they've been left alone, enjoying generous subsidies from Russia in the form of virtually free gas and a share of the Trans-Balkan pipeline. On the other side Transnistrians can travel freely to mainland Moldova (and from there visa-free to the EU), since most Transnistrians have Moldovan passports. While in theory, people there are staunchly pro-Russian, having been fed a steady diet of Russian TV, they like things to stay just as they are. — SophistiCat
Ask yourself, SophistiCat, does Russia or anybody really listen to the Transnistrians when deciding on these matters?
In fact before February 24th for a long time things in the Donbas were rather similar to what you stated above from Transnistria: people could move back and forth to Ukraine and Ukraine even paid pensions to people in the Donbas People's Republics. I'm sure the people that actually supported Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics back in 2014 aren't so enthusiastic about how things are going now. — ssu
Yes. Although there was the Transnistrian war in 1990-1992, which was rather similar (as the war in Donbas 2014-2022).It's not a fair comparison: life in Donbas was pretty miserable even before the invasion. — SophistiCat
(30th July, 2022) The situation has not undergone significant changes in the Volyn and Polissia directions. There have been no signs of the formation of offensive groups by the armed forces of the Russian Federation and the armed forces of the Republic of Belarus. The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said this in its morning report published on Facebook, Ukrinform reports.
The task is to make Mariupol a resort city, which has not been possible before — TASS (May 9, 2022)
if Azovstal is not restored, then we will make a resort town — TASS (May 9, 2022)
And yes, quite well to stay away from a dumpster fire like this thread. — ssu
Hopefully not. :roll:Are you talking about your own comments? — boethius
Usually they are like that... as people really don't get heated up about various armed groups fighting in a civil war in a country that they have problem finding on a map.I don't see why people would be surprised that the subject of an ongoing war isn't in the framework of the usual academic decorum, hedged language, and polite patting on the back for everyone participating in an obscure, unimportant, and zero-stakes intellectual masterbation session. — boethius
But this thread is now going to be 300 pages and some have this fixation that the most important issue talked about should be the US tells something. — ssu
Usually they are like that... as people really don't get heated up about various armed groups fighting in a civil war in a country that they have problem finding on a map. — ssu
Usually they are like that... as people really don't get heated up about various armed groups fighting in a civil war in a country that they have problem finding on a map. — ssu
Just from where the most participants are from (mainly from the Anglosphere). Which is quite natural as we use English.What is the something that it tells? — boethius
Well, let's hope participating on a Philosophy forum isn't virtue signalling.Sure, many people don't care about any war, participated in discussing this one to jump on the social media virtue signalling band-waggon before hopping off. — boethius
This is a real possibility, I agree.As for the current state of the war, counter offensive against Kershon does not seem to be working.
I would guess that the second last batch of weapons was predicated on the promise of holding out in Dombas, and now the latest batch of weapons is predicated on a promise of counter offensive in Kershon.
If this counter-offensive fails, "allies" will continue to wind-down their arms shipments to Ukraine, continue to deescalate with Russia, and forget about Ukraine. — boethius
Olivier5 are passionate about their case for war, — boethius
Yes. Although there was the Transnistrian war in 1990-1992, which was rather similar (as the war in Donbas 2014-2022). — ssu
The bigger player here that is and hopefully will stay inactive is of course Belarus. There are Belarussian fighters fighting in the lines of Ukraine, questionable support for the current leadership (after the massive demonstrations put down with violence) and basically no reason for Belarus to attack it's southern neighbor. Hence it's likely that the current situation will prevail with Belarus giving Russian forces a ground to operate, but won't join themselves the fighting. — ssu
On the economic "sanctions"-front, I think that Russia has played it's cards very well. It simply is just such a large supplier of natural resources that the World cannot simply disregard it. The logical way for the West to counter this would be to try a push the price of oil and gas down by increasing production, but that would go against what has been set as goal to curb climate change. German energy policy of having relied to Russian energy with closing down nuclear plants and now having to open coal plants show how clueless the West actually is here. — ssu
Just from where the most participants are from (mainly from the Anglosphere). Which is quite natural as we use English. — ssu
Well, let's hope participating on a Philosophy forum isn't virtue signalling. — ssu
This is a real possibility, I agree. — ssu
It seems that already Russia has signaled that it will take a break. And likely Ukraine doesn't have the ability to muster a large counterattack. There is the possibility that the war does what it did after 2014-2015: become a stalemate. Or at least for the time being until Russia simply can train new batches of conscripts and add up the needed materiel. — ssu
On the economic "sanctions"-front, I think that Russia has played it's cards very well. It simply is just such a large supplier of natural resources that the World cannot simply disregard it. The logical way for the West to counter this would be to try a push the price of oil and gas down by increasing production, but that would go against what has been set as goal to curb climate change. German energy policy of having relied to Russian energy with closing down nuclear plants and now having to open coal plants show how clueless the West actually is here.
Ukraine is still just one issue among others and Putin knows that. — ssu
If Europe goes through with its divestment from Russian energy, then Russia's game doesn't look so good in the medium term. Oil and gas are not like gold: moving them takes a lot of specialized infrastructure that simply does not exist today and won't come into existence any time soon. — SophistiCat
And Asia's appetite for Russian energy isn't bottomless either: they'll take what they can if the discount is big enough, but they have other supplies as well. — SophistiCat
i don't think I have argued the case of war, i have just observed that the call for peace negotiations is part of the war. — Olivier5
Posters whining here that there are no peace negociations are only repeating uncritically the propaganda of the Kremlin. — Olivier5
You've clearly argued that Ukrainians should fight
— boethius
Where did I do so? — Olivier5
↪Tzeentch Taking care of the Russian threat for a generation is well worth the price. — Olivier5
Rather than asking boethius to trawl through 300 pages of posts to find an exact quote to cover the very obvious support you show for continued war. — Isaac
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