Well, you can think of it in terms of "surrender". But you can also think of it as "saving lives", and potentially the planet.
Or instead of "surrender", we can call it a "stop" in violence. But sadly, this isn't the route being followed. — Manuel
It's a matter of priority: do you think saving many, many lives is worth stopping the war, or are you confident that escalation will defeat Russia? If you think the latter is the case, then of course you wouldn't want to surrender. My intuitions don't lead to that conclusion. But in geopolitical affairs, people differ and are often wrong about what ends up happening. — Manuel
You insist on using the word "surrender". If you say "compromise", then I agree with the last statement. — Manuel
Ukraine has exceeded expectations by far. — Manuel
When there's a compromise, both parties walk away with something they wanted. What sort of compromise could there have been during this war? — frank
Ukraine gets rid of the invaders. Russia keeps Crimea.
Ukraine declares victory against a nuclear power, Russia declares "denazification" successful.
What's negotiated are the cities, which Russia gives back and maybe gets a token piece of territory. — Manuel
Something like that I think could be doable. — Manuel
Nonviolent resistance is not non-resistance. — unenlightened
Ukraine gets rid of the invaders. Russia keeps Crimea. — Manuel
We shouldn't forget how many Ukrainians have died too. This is a huge conventional war and likely it will cost over 100 000 killed in less than a year, which just tells about the ferocity of the fighting.Yep. They say about 60,000 Russian soldiers have died. That's how many Americans died in the whole Vietnam war. — frank
An outcome where Putin can declare victory, having achieved a land bridge to Kyiv and have gotten more territories annexed so that he can declare "Novorossiya" to part of Russia again seems hardly a great outcome.Ukraine has exceeded expectations by far. But stopping now as opposed to later, would be better for everybody.
Again- I could be wrong. — Manuel
I don't disagree with the analysis here. I'm throwing out some ideas of what a negotiation could look like. But something has to be exchanged, I think. — Manuel
Ummm...depends on just how old you are. :wink:Unbelievable. The region won't recover in our lifetime, huh? — frank
I have trouble seeing a military defeat as being an option for Russia. I really do think they'll risk a nuclear war before being defeated. I hope I am wrong, I really do. — Manuel
If you want the aggressor to have a face saving victory, I guess now would be the perfect time to have an immediate cease-fire and set Russian territorial gains to start where the no-mans land is now. A time-out is what the Russian army needs now.The question is what course of action we should endorse as a solution to it. — Isaac
Yes. If you decide to ignore all counterarguments, that tends to be the outcome. — Isaac
This is a cartoonization of the real world. Reminds me quite a bit of the propaganda used in WWI. Very dangerous thinking, in my opinion. — Manuel
Russia has seen it's share of defeats (just like the US with Vietnam and Afghanistan — ssu
I didn't ask for your assessment. I think you know why. — frank
I'll grant you Afghanistan, no doubt. — Manuel
I don't think anyone is now eager to jump into Putin's place.Now, if you have a situation in which the military gets tired and get rid of Putin, OK. Maybe that ends the war. But I wouldn't put all my eggs in that basket, we don't know if that would work well. — Manuel
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