His words could have brought NATO into a war with Russia on false premises. That's negligence on a criminal level. — Isaac
I've quoted it back to you several times:
You misunderstood my claim. I was referring precisely to the following condition: “each side saw it was in their best interest to avoid a large scale nuclear war”. The best interest of both US and Soviet Union was calculated by taking into account the deterrence means they both had (but Ukraine doesn’t have!), and this was pre-condition for the kind of agreements they could rationally pursue. — boethius
It cannot be clearer that your implication is that it would not be rational for Ukraine to enter the same agreements without nuclear weapons. — boethius
Since, you moved the goalpost from "pre-condition" (the word you use) to "rational requirement" to "taking into account". — boethius
NATO does not take its orders from Zelensky. — Olivier5
More claims and conjectures and ornamental blablabla. — neomac
Maybe they are a bit smarter than you are? — Olivier5
Paul Massaro, a prominent American supporter of Ukraine and member of the U.S. Helsinki Commission, said around the same time that “Russian terrorism” had reached Poland, adding shortly after that it was “[h]ard to believe this was an accident.”
“Very concerned by Russian missiles dropping in Poland,” tweeted Slovakian Defense Minister Jaroslav Nad at 2:46 pm. “Will be in close contact with [NATO allies] to coordinate [a] response.”
A “senior European diplomat” echoed Nad in a Politico piece, saying that it was “appalling to see a desperate regime attacking critical infrastructure of Ukraine and hitting allied territory with victims.”
Anders Aslund of the Atlantic Council argued at around 3:30 pm. In a message aimed directly at President Joe Biden, Aslund said, “You have promised to defend ‘every inch of NATO territory.’ Are you going to bomb Russia now?”
Sergej Sumlenny, a prominent European policy expert, implied in a viral tweet that the attack was an intentional extension of Russia’s assault on Ukrainian infrastructure.
Mykhailo Podolyak, one of the top advisors to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, declared that the strikes were “not an accident, but a deliberately planned ‘hello’ from [Russia], disguised as a ‘mistake.’”
Zelensky tweeted that the “Russian attack on collective security in the Euro-Atlantic is a significant escalation” of the conflict.
Podolyak maintained that NATO should enact a no-fly zone in Ukraine,
If Zelensky believes in good faith that the missile was sent by Russia, then he is not following a political line in saying so. He is just saying what he believes is the case. — Olivier5
Hitting NATO territory with missiles. … This is a Russian missile attack on collective security! This is a really significant escalation. Action is needed. — Zelensky
Not everything Ukrainian is necessarily sinister, you know?
But of course you have to immediately spin it to some pro-Ukrainian stance — Isaac
The fact is that the US and Poland have both said conflicting things within their own nations so there's nothing conclusive at all about this. — Christoffer
What Zelensky did yesterday was insane! Does he not understand that such reckless acts will harm Ukraine much more than the current war?
A nuclear war would destroy every single Ukranian, European and likely the majority of the world's population. — Manuel
That's not what Zelensky and people in his cabinet said at the time these missiles hit Polish territory. — Manuel
Russian missiles hit Poland, the territory of our friendly country. People died. Please accept condolences from all Ukrainian brothers. Poland, the Baltic states. it's only a matter of time before Russian terror goes further. We must put the terrorist in place. the longe Russia feels impunity, the more threats there will be to everyone who can be reached by missiles. To strike with missiles NATO territory isa Russian strike on collective security. It's a significant escalation. Action is required. I now want to tell our Polish brothers and sisters - Ukraine will always support you. free people won't be broken by terror. Victory is possible when there is no fear. And we and you are not afraid. — Zelensky
"Action is needed" — Benkei
But what should be clear to him, is that getting direct NATO involvement would signify the end of Ukraine and of Europe. This is not secret information. — Manuel
And how would they decide what missiles count as rouge or not? There is very little margin of error here.
If the margin were as big as you imply, such actions would have already been considered and probably implemented, given how long the war has been going on. — Manuel
but if it's within a context of diplomatic pressure against Russia that "this is the only way Nato can assure Russia that they will not escalate into war but instead protect themselves from Russian misfires". It's an escalation, sure, but not a direct war and it would set a specific context around why it's initiated as a direct pressure point toward Russia to stop sending in missiles. — Christoffer
but if Russia misfires into a Nato nation they could argue that they need to defend themselves against such events and Russia has little to argue against that. — Christoffer
It's insane what people demand of him in the situation he's in from behind the safety of our own nations. — Christoffer
As many as theorized, there's a good possibility Russia has reached its strategic goals (land access to Crimea) and if that is the case, they are likely looking to end the conflict sooner rather than later. Giving up Kherson may very well be the price. — Tzeentch
take the wretched bombs out already, aggressively, throughout, whether it takes lots or more or special or expensive tech or not — jorndoe
Better stop shooting down missiles and kamikaze drones then — jorndoe
Yes — Isaac
Because this would force Russia to go nuclear — Manuel
They wouldn't be forced to start nuking. Besides, if they did, then that'd likely end up worse for Russia(ns) anyway. They'd still have decisions to make. — jorndoe
Choosing between downing incoming bombs and letting them fall isn't much of a choice. (NASAMS can help, too. :up:) Could always try to calculate (expected) numerical differences I guess; there is a fair amount of data to go by: — jorndoe
You have an interesting idea of "good faith" — Benkei
Zelensky's willingness to make these claims without knowledge, or more likey with knowledge to the contrary, is a reminder that our interests do not align 100% with that of Ukraine. — Benkei
So he doesn't know (according to you) but he's totally fine with calling for an escalation of a war with a nuclear super power — Benkei
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