Their ability to bomb Ukraine has decreased quite dramatically, in part thanks to the weapons supplied, so yes, there is definitely improvement there. — Jabberwock
It is your claim that Ukraine would be less destroyed if the weapons were not supplied, so it is on you to provide a realistic and likely scenario how would that happen. — Jabberwock
I treat the Russians as if they wanted to occupy Ukraine, because I have no reason to think 'Putin would have just carpet bombed Ukraine for sport', him being an oligarch and all. — Jabberwock
you overlook the fact that Russia has neutered itself militarily even more. — Jabberwock
is obvious from most of the campaign, with any reasonable resistance Russians are incapable of gaining ground without destroying it completely, so they would do just that. — Jabberwock
Has it? In what way? — Isaac
Negotiate and provide concessions, or seek more powerful alliances willing to fight alongside and use them as leverage. — Isaac
If an enemy throws stones, throwing stones back is not a viable strategy if they have more stones. — Isaac
That just doesn't make any sense. Simply being an oligarch isn't in the least bit sufficient to justify a theory that he'll want to militarily occupy any neighbouring country. It's ridiculous. The vast majority of the world's oligarchs do not behave that way. — Isaac
I don't 'overlook' it. I disagree with it. Tanks are not the be all and end all of military power and they're about the only major hardware that's capturable, so of course they're going to be used as the measure if that's the story you want to tell. What about artillery? What about air support? What about nuclear weapons? — Isaac
It isn't obvious at all since you have no counterfactual against which to compare it. — Isaac
I'm sure on paper everything is looking just dandy for Ukraine.
How many thousands of lives and billions in damages is defeating Washington's ego worth? — neomac
Convincing people that Ukraine has a chance of 'winning' is the main method by which continued drip-feed sales of weapons are justified (making the arms manufacturers an unrivalled fortune). Since Ukraine is actually being destroyed (economically, but also literally), it takes quite the major advertising effort to keep this illusion up. Hence the massive social media campaign, of which your posts (wittingly or not) form part. — Isaac
Convincing people that Ukraine has a chance of 'winning' — Isaac
it takes quite the major advertising effort to keep this illusion up — Isaac
Hence the massive social media campaign, of which your posts (wittingly or not) form part — Isaac
It appears those who would post lengthy and strongly-worded posts on how the Ukrainians must continue to fight and die — Tzeentch
It's not to the penny accounting, but it's just dishonest to present it as if we just don't know. — Isaac
Not that many. This isn't some unknown quantity we might as well toss a coin over. — Isaac
You dudes think to make a point just by caricaturing opponents' views.
That's intellectually abhorrent. — neomac
your helpless craving for pinning roughly everything bad is happening primarily on the US. — neomac
Then how many exactly? Tell me exactly how you made the calculation. — neomac
It appears those who would post lengthy and strongly-worded posts on how the Ukrainians must continue to fight and die, themselves lack the courage to risk something so trivial as being wrong. — Tzeentch
your helpless craving for pinning roughly everything bad is happening primarily on the US. — neomac
... would be an example of caricaturing your opponent's views, yes. I — Isaac
Funny how this has only just occurred to you after nearly 500 pages of having every single opposing view caricatured as Putin-loving, Putinistas, Russiophiles etc... but it's good that you're on top of it now. — Isaac
Then how many exactly? Tell me exactly how you made the calculation. — neomac
I just did. — Isaac
You are campaigning against your own intellectual decency. — neomac
Coming from you, that's rich. :rofl: — Tzeentch
I believe they should be helped as much as possible. I do hope they win, but I am far from certain that they will. — Jabberwock
Only if it has more chance of winning that defence than it does of being destroyed by it. Otherwise to provide weapons (alone) is monstrous. — Isaac
I agree. — Jabberwock
You agree above that it is "monstrous" to provide weapons (alone) to a country that doesn't have more chance of winning that defence than it does of being destroyed by it.
Yet here, you say you're "far from certain" they'll win, yet you think supplying arms is the right thing to do.
Which is it? — Isaac
You know what a caricature is, right? It doesn't just mean 'got wrong'. — Isaac
Then how many exactly? Tell me exactly how you made the calculation. — neomac
I just did. — Isaac
Quote where you did it. — neomac
Scarcely a month into the war Russia was speaking of denazification of Ukraine and on the offensive, so your argument that it was Washington’s ego that blocked peace talks is hilarious. (Or actually, very typical to you…)How far should the situation in Ukraine deterioriate before we can agree the peace accords that were on the table in March / April 2022, scarcely a month into the war, should have been carried out instead of blocked by the US?
Those were blocked by the US simply to save Washington's ego. — Tzeentch
The war broke out, and within a month Zelensky said: "[Ukraine] could be neutral." And negotiations started in Ankara with Turkish mediation. And I spoke to the Turkish mediators. I spoke to people who were deeply involved in this. There was rapid progress made on the basis of Ukrainian neutrality.
Then, one day, the Ukrainians [stopped the negotiations]. The best estimate given to us by former prime minister Naftali Bennett in a very interesting, long interview he gave online a couple months ago, said: "The US stopped it. I didn't agree with them, but they thought they needed to be tough towards China. That it would be a sign of weakness to go along with [the peace negotiations]."
Honest to god. It's worse than five-year-olds.
And on what terms were they (the Russians) negotiating with the neonazis they were meant to denazify back then?The Russians and the Ukrainians were ready for peace. — Tzeentch
But what really ended efforts to bring about peace – which had continued since the 24 February invasion – was the proclaimed annexation of the Ukrainian oblasts of Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Cherson. Since his election in 2019, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has repeatedly called on Putin to agree to a personal meeting, even in the first weeks of this year’s Russian invasion. But on 4 October 2022, in response to the actions of the Russian side, he signed a decree rejecting direct talks. Ever since the beginning of the Russian aggression in 2014, and all the more so since 24 February 2022, the course of Ukrainian-Russian negotiations has been highly dependent on the situation in the battlefield and the broader political context.
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