I'm not trying to falsify it. I'm not claiming Zelensky doesn't have popular support. I'm claiming we don't know for sure in any specific strategy. You're the one claiming we do know. — Isaac
Twelfth time now...
I wasn't wondering why it was the case. I was pointing out one of the consequences of it being the case. — Isaac — Isaac
Thirteenth time the charm...
I wasn't wondering why it was the case. I was pointing out one of the consequences of it being the case. — Isaac — Isaac
That when we say that some decision about Ukraine is rightly "up to the Ukrainians" we currently have no legitimate method of asking them, we are talking about a (currently) autocratic government without opposition. As such we are mistaken if we legitimise Ukrainian strategic decisions on the grounds of a Ukrainian right to self-determination.
Zelensky's apparent recent decision to refuse negotiations until there's regime change in Russia, for example, is not a legitimate decision of the Ukrainian people. — Isaac
Propaganda works also through artists, pop stars, and other kinds of VIPs — neomac
So? Are you suggesting propaganda induced opinions are well-informed ones? — Isaac
I questioned your and other Pollyannas' full grasp of Mearsheimers&co views wrt the subject "legitimate security concerns". — neomac
Yes, the question was - with what qualification? On what ground is your 'grasp' the 'full' one? Do you have any citations from experts to back up your interpretation. — Isaac
The White House has stated that its position on this conflict is that by supplying Ukraine with a seemingly-inexhaustable supply of military aide, it will bring about peace in Ukraine. War is peace. — _db
On the other, you condemn the White House for supplying aid to Ukraine. — frank
Simple: it is legitimate for NATO to help Ukrainians fight this war — Olivier5
By virtue of being on site... — Olivier5
having relatives and friends in Ukraine and Russia to whom they can talk — Olivier5
speaking the languages — Olivier5
following local news — Olivier5
My knowledge claim amounts to questioning your claim that we do not have “proper measure” to assess legitimacy through popular support. — neomac
Better now? — neomac
that doesn’t necessarily imply misinformation, nor that propaganda is an illegitimate or ineffective way to earn political support, just because it doesn’t inform well enough. — neomac
With the same qualification you pick Mearsheimer&co’s claims to support your views. — neomac
I never said the Ukrainians were a mass, nor that Google translate did not exist. — Olivier5
It's a really simple question. It just requires you to identify the data gathering and communication method Ukrainians use that other nationalities do not have access to. — Isaac
how many Ukrainian dead are worthwhile to attain such an objective? — boethius
relatively, the Ukrainians are in a better position in terms of access to information on the war in Ukraine than foreigners, by virtue of being closer to it. — Olivier5
Beside, their lives are on the line, not ours — Olivier5
Millions are facing starvation because of this war, and thousands of rich Ukrainians will remain completely untouched by it, including many of those actually making decisions. Wars don't affect people on the basis of what fucking passport they carry. They affect, unsurprisingly, the poorest, the working class. And they affect whomever they touch, passport or no. — Isaac
if you were visiting planet Kepler-186f, landing on it and exploring it, don't you think you'd have a better feel for it than from your average living room in Wigan or Trenton? — Olivier5
Propaganda is OK. Autocracy is OK. Banning free press is OK. Conscription is OK. Denying human rights is OK. — Isaac
I wouldn't so easily have been able to find a poll to the contrary. — Isaac
In addition, the lack of opposition parties and opposition press means that any support thus measured is unlikely to be well-informed and so even less useful as an indicator of genuine support. — Isaac
You, however, do need some qualification if you want to claim a view or interpretation is wrong, more than merely disagreeing. — Isaac
The poll doesn't survey the popularity of Zelensky among Ukrainians — neomac
Zero problem with that in democracy. — neomac
It's enough to have read Mearsheimer's to realise how clumsy it's your attempt to making a point in favor of your views by citing him. — neomac
i's no surprise that you do not understand what "legitimate security concerns" means in Mearsheimer's "offensive realism" theory. — neomac
Yes. But your average Ukrainian is not visiting the front line, nor are they visiting the negotiation rooms in Parliament, so the analogy is irrelevant. — Isaac
There are journalists, intelligence agents and amateur social media posters who all have a better grasp of the situation in those two areas than the average Ukrainian. They publish their information online for anyone to read. — Isaac
It tells me how hard the citizens of Bakhmut are finding it to survive. — Isaac
So? — Isaac
I didn't ask if you had a problem with it. — Isaac
I'm explaining the consequences. — Isaac
You've yet to demonstrate that — Isaac
Quite a few Ukrainians of both sex are "visiting" the frontline. — Olivier5
But all these sources like ISW are available to Ukrainians too — Olivier5
on top of their capacity for direct observation and interview. — Olivier5
the citizens of Bakhmut know better about it. — Olivier5
the poll you provided is again an indicator to take into account, that however doesn't invalidate the claim that Zelensky has great support from Ukrainians. — neomac
Zelensky is committed to a policy which this poll indicates does not have great popular support. — Isaac
the desperate, terrifying and bloody circumstances of the soldiers on the front line are hardly good conditions from which to get a good strategic overview. That's why armies have intelligence units and a command structure. — Isaac
You're trying (and failing) to make the case that they're better informed. I'm not making the case that they're less well informed. — Isaac
on top of their capacity for direct observation and interview.
— Olivier5
Which is miniscule compared to the size of the population. Journalists have access to direct observation and interview too. — Isaac
It doesn't give them any better an overview of the whole strategic situation. — Isaac
↪Olivier5
As Benkei said...
I don't trust the news in normal times and actively distrust it in war times.
— Benkei
...or did you go to Ukraine yourself, talk to the soldiers there, gather that intelligence directly... You must get up very early in the morning to get all that done. — Isaac
I'm not so sure of that, actually. US officials have been in contact with their counterparts.Communication between the nuclear superpowers has deteriorated a great deal. The diplomacy that existed a few decades ago no longer exists. If there were already several extremely close calls back then, it stands to reason that we're in an even more delicate situation now that communication is gone. — _db
(BBC 21st October 2022) US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoigu spoke on Friday, the two countries confirmed.
Both sides said the situation in Ukraine was discussed.
It is the first time they have spoken since a call on 13 May.
After Friday's call, Pentagon press secretary Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder told the BBC that the US was "eager to keep lines of communication open".
"It has been since May since the two gentlemen spoke, so Secretary Austin took today as an opportunity to connect with Minister Shoigu," he said.
Russia's defence ministry said that "current questions of international security were discussed, including the situation in Ukraine".
(May 16th, 1979 WP) Almost 2 1/2 years after taking office, President Carter finally met Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev today, and both immediately agreed that is was long overdue.
In reporting the exchange on the eve of their first formal summit session Saturday, U.S. officials said both Carter and Brezhnev indicated that their next meeting should take place much sooner.
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