↪ssu This is a common tack among demagogues and propagandists: emphasize (or fabricate) uncertainty, throw up not one but many alternative narratives. Anything is possible, there's too much propaganda on both sides, we will never know the truth, it's all so confusing... When your position is weak, just upset the board. — SophistiCat
Nearly six months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, there is still widespread disagreement in the west on Vladimir Putin’s motives.
This is of more than academic interest. If we do not agree why Putin decided to invade Ukraine and what he wants to achieve, we cannot define what would constitute victory or defeat for either of the warring sides and the contours of a possible endgame. — Philip Short - has written authoritative biographies including Putin
Why, then, did Putin stake so much on a high-risk enterprise that will at best bring him a tenuous grip on a ruined land?
At first it was said that he was unhinged – “a lunatic”, in the words of the defence secretary, Ben Wallace. Putin was pictured lecturing his defence chiefs, cowering at the other end of a 6-metre long table. But not long afterwards, the same officials were shown sitting at his side. The long table turned out to be theatrics – Putin’s version of Nixon’s “madman” theory, to make him appear so irrational that anything was possible, even nuclear war. — Philip Short - has written authoritative biographies including Putin
Then western officials argued that Putin was terrified at the prospect of a democratic Ukraine on Russia’s border [...]
The invasion has also been portrayed as a straightforward imperialist land grab. [...]
In fact, Putin’s invasion is being driven by other considerations. — Philip Short - has written authoritative biographies including Putin
Bill Burns, now the head of the CIA, who was then the US ambassador to Moscow, wrote at the time in a secret cable to the White House: “Ukrainian entry into Nato is the brightest of all red lines for the Russian elite (not just Putin). In my more than two-and-a-half years of conversations with key Russian players, from knuckle-draggers in the dark recesses of the Kremlin to Putin’s sharpest liberal critics, I have yet to find anyone who views Ukraine in Nato as anything other than a direct challenge to Russia’s interests … Today’s Russia will respond.”
The madman theory is a political theory commonly associated with US President Richard Nixon's foreign policy. Nixon and his administration tried to make the leaders of hostile Communist Bloc nations think he was irrational and volatile. According to the theory, those leaders would then avoid provoking the United States, fearing an unpredictable American response.
Some international relations scholars have been skeptical of madman theory as a strategy for success in bargaining.[1][2] One study found that madman theory is frequently counterproductive, but that it can be an asset under certain conditions.[3] — Madman Theory - Wikipedia
However, the truth is that the principle of "can't send NATO troops" or "can't send too many arms", to avoid WWIII, is simply used as a manipulation tool to calibrate the arms and intelligence support to maintain the war by propping up Ukraine, but not nearly enough support for Ukraine to have a chance of winning. — boethius
↪boethius You are still on mute — SophistiCat
LOL. Just watch.... — Olivier5
I don't think people generally think of Putin as mad insane.
At least, outside of the usual (sociopathic) authoritarian strategizing/manipulation.
Anyway, so, what's the simplest coherent explanation? (Or a coherent simpler explanation?)
Attempting to push Russia up the food chain? — jorndoe
Why was the war destined for failure from the very beginning, what sources of information did president Putin rely on before starting it, and why did nobody in the Federal Security Service [FSB] of the Russian Federation tell him the truth about the real situation in Ukraine
"As ridiculous as it sounds, the decision to go to war was made by the most uninformed person that could possibly have taken it. The president," my source sneers.
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu is out of favor with Vladimir Putin. The president confers directly with commanders charged with the conduct of the military operation.
The fact that the leadership is poorly informed is admitted even by the ex-Minister of State Security of the DPR, former commander of the Vostok brigade Alexander Khodakovsky. “One of the main problems with a closed system that took shape over decades and that is permeated by competing interest groups is an abject fear of being the bearer of bad news. Some highly placed generals who are capable of admitting certain issues in an intimate setting, when asked why they don't report them, reply: 'I'd be sacked if I did...'”
Watch Ukraine retake all the Donbas and Crimea? — boethius
a Russian investigative publication. ....
https://storage.googleapis.com/istories/index.html — SophistiCat
Again the "Putin attacked Ukraine because of NATO-membership" argument?All just "propaganda" a literal biographer of Putin pointing out we don't know Putin's objectives? — boethius
(TASS, February 16th 2022) BERLIN, February 16. /TASS/. Ukraine’s NATO membership is not on the alliance’s agenda at the moment, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz told German reporters after talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"There is a fact, and the fact is: all parties know that Ukraine’s NATO membership is not on the agenda," the German leader said at a news conference, broadcast by WELT.
He went on to say that in this situation "everyone should step back a bit," and spoke against "a military standoff about an issue which is not even on the agenda."
Scholz made similar statements during a joint news conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier in the day.
(NEXTA) German @Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz said that before the war in Ukraine began, he had promised Putin that Ukraine would not become a NATO member in the coming decades, Die Welt reports.
Again the "Putin attacked Ukraine because of NATO-membership" argument? — ssu
Nearly six months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, there is still widespread disagreement in the west on Vladimir Putin’s motives. — Philip Short - has written authoritative biographies including Putin
I think everyone agrees that one single reason doesn't explain a decision to go to war and obviously Russia wouldn't like Ukraine to be a member of NATO. However this idea that this was the most important reason (or only reason) depends on the idea that Ukrainian membership was possible/realistic/imminent. — ssu
I think you and me will have to wait about 30 years before we have a reasonable view of what likely happened. It's true that only 50-100 years history usually has come to an overall conclusion and the historians are arguing about the minor details, but likely in 30 years we can see how it was.We don't really know what the motives are, there is widespread disagreement, and several narratives have come and gone about it in the Western press.
I'm completely open to speculation of essentially any plausible motive. — boethius
So your " completely open to speculation of essentially any plausible motive", yet you have decided that NATO expansion "is clearly a main driver of the hostilities and tensions". Well perhaps "a main driver" is better than "the main driver".It is clearly a main driver of the hostilities and tensions. — boethius
By annexing territories of other sovereign countries. Right. :roll:The only prima facie interpretation of the context available is that Russia is reacting to clearly hostile moves. — boethius
We forget just what have been the real military victories of Russia and Soviet Union after World War 2. The really successful large military operation was in 1968 the Occupation of Czechoslovakia. Such large attack that the Czech army didn't raise it's finger and not even the Czech people dared to fight with against the tanks as had the Hungarians in 1956. There wasn't any war, just a surrender, basically protests. — ssu
I think you and me will have to wait about 30 years before we have a reasonable view of what likely happened. — ssu
So your " completely open to speculation of essentially any plausible motive", yet you have decided that NATO expansion "is clearly a main driver of the hostilities and tensions". — ssu
Well perhaps "a main driver" is better than "the main driver". — ssu
Well, if it was just NATO membership, Russia wouldn't be annexing parts of Ukraine. It is as simple as that you cannot deny that. You simply cannot. Regime change yes, annexation no. — ssu
By annexing territories of other sovereign countries. Right. :roll: — ssu
We've had this discussion in this thread of what Crimea meant for Russia, how Crimea is now seen as integral part of Russia and how it is now seen by Putin an illegal act and so on. — ssu
If your are blind to the fact that Russia wants to dominate all of it's former states and does want parts of Ukraine, if it can, then there's not much to change your view. — ssu
I remember when they studied the effects of WW2 on children in Finland, they found that the most traumatic experiences were with those children that were evacuated to Sweden and were separated from their families and parents. No civilians were left to the hands of Russians as the civilian population was evacuated from front. At least now it has been mothers with their children that have been evacuated from Ukraine.Over half of Ukraine's children are now refugees or fleeing (some more or less kidnapped), with no light at the end of the Ukrainian tunnel.
As seen before, a generation could be lost, while Putin's machinations bomb away, allegedly to deNazify and/or out of fear of NATO.
The right thing to do in the immediate term would be for Putin to turn the volume down, simple as that.
So far, UNICEF et al arranged for schooling/education for some 600,000 children having fled Ukraine. — jorndoe
There is a very interesting longue durée in the way Russia works it's imperialistic goals. The methods and tactics are basically same. From Putin's speeches the historical viewpoint is evident, something that rarely Western politicians use, but is very common for example in the Middle East.The disastrous Winter War that preceded this didn't discourage the Soviets - and the gamble payed off. They installed puppet governments, which promptly held "elections," followed by a vote to become new Soviet Socialist Republics (with 90+% voting in favor).
So yeah, they've learned all the wrong lessons from history, if they learned at all. — SophistiCat
Aug 25 (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on Thursday to increase the size of Russia's armed forces from 1.9 million to 2.04 million as the war in Ukraine enters its seventh month.
Moscow has not revealed any losses in the conflict since its first weeks, but Western officials and the Kyiv government say they number in the thousands.
The increase includes a 137,000 boost in the number of combat personnel to 1.15 million. It comes into effect on Jan 1, according to the decree published on the government's legislative portal.
Even in the spring draft the objectives weren't met. So easier said than done. — ssu
:smile:Why not? Do people just flee to the Eurasian steppes and live with camels to escape the draft?
Bu
Or do they dress like Cossacks and get so drunk their hearts stop beating?
I'm very familiar with Russian life, as you can tell. — Tate
Russia on Tuesday temporarily exempted young IT workers from military service after an exodus of programmers following Moscow's military operation in Ukraine.
in Russia, military service is mandatory for men aged 18 to 27. But according to a recent European Parliamentary Research Service report, each year, half of all would-be conscripts—75,000 out of an annual intake of around 150,000 young men—are thought to be dodging the draft.
Vladimir Putin is determined to shape the future to look like his version of the past. Russia’s president invaded Ukraine not because he felt threatened by NATO expansion or by Western “provocations.” He ordered his “special military operation” because he believes that it is Russia’s divine right to rule Ukraine, to wipe out the country’s national identity, and to integrate its people into a Greater Russia.
We are not at war with people of blood and flesh. We are at war with an idea: with an idea of Ukraine as an anti-Russian state. There can be no peace. We must de-Ukrainize Ukraine. The Russian land of Malorossia must be returned back to Russia...
This is why the tragedy for the Ukrainian soldiers is that we are fighting with an idea, and we don't give a shit how many of them we have to kill and how we have to kill them... Since we are fighting with an idea, all who share this idea must be destroyed like this poor sucker."
If Russia stops fighting there will be no more war. If Ukrainians stop fighting there will be no more Ukraine. — GA: Ukraine (Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Sweden, Denmark · Feb 28, 2022)
#StandWithUkraine
On a related note, here is a recent opinion piece by Fiona Hill and Angela Stent in Foreign Affairs: The World Putin Wants:
Vladimir Putin is determined to shape the future to look like his version of the past. Russia’s president invaded Ukraine not because he felt threatened by NATO expansion or by Western “provocations.” He ordered his “special military operation” because he believes that it is Russia’s divine right to rule Ukraine, to wipe out the country’s national identity, and to integrate its people into a Greater Russia. — SophistiCat
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