It can still continue to resist militarily, unconventionally if need be, to impose a cost on Russia. This gives them leverage in negotiations — Tzeentch
However, continuing to resist without an actual strategy of what that resistance is supposed to accomplish is remarkably foolish. Imposing a cost on Russia is a sound strategy from an American point of view, not from a Ukrainian point of view, since it would incur a much larger cost on Ukraine itself - it would destroy Ukraine. — Tzeentch
Neither Europe nor Ukraine should make themselves complicit in such a strategy. — Tzeentch
The support increases Ukraine's ability to impose costs and thus their position in negotiations. — Echarmion
But you literally just wrote that imposing costs on Russia is the basis of the Ukrainian position in negotiations. So the strategic goal of imposing costs to demonstrate your ability to impose future costs seems entirely sound. — Echarmion
What exactly is the moral argument here? — Echarmion
How keenly you leave out the annexations, the Russification measures done in the territories under occupation and all that Putin has himself said about Ukraine being an artificial construct.The Russians aren't interested in taking all of Ukraine. They prefer a negotiated settlement that leaves Ukraine filling its role as neutral bufferzone between east and west. — Tzeentch
We are far past that point. Zelensky is not moving to negotiate. He even signed a decree to make negotiations with Russia impossible. The absolute fool. — Tzeentch
Obviously the support is achieving the opposite of sound strategy, which is why Ukraine is slowly approaching the edge of the cliff. Quite extraordinary you're unable to see that. — Tzeentch
It's a strategic argument. Neither Ukraine nor Europe benefits from playing into Washington's hand. — Tzeentch
From a moral perspective it is of course repugnant too. — Tzeentch
That happened after the West blocked peace talks. — Tzeentch
Well what is it? Can Ukraine negotiate or not? — Echarmion
Your strategy seems to offer little other than the hope you are right about russian intentions. — Echarmion
Don't they? — Echarmion
Why exactly though? — Echarmion
Ukraine is being utterly wrecked in every conceivable way. — Tzeentch
Europe threw its economy down the drain, now has a hostile great power on its doorstep while having completely stripped its military, and it has been turned into the world's laughing stock to boot. — Tzeentch
Wrong.That happened after the West blocked peace talks. — Tzeentch
Sweden is a strong, capable defense partner that champions NATO’s values, and will further strengthen the Alliance once its NATO accession is completed. Sweden’s membership will strengthen our collective defense and enhance our ability to respond to security challenges in the Euro-Atlantic area. Sweden will be a net security provider from its first day in NATO, and the Alliance will be stronger with Sweden as a NATO Ally. — US Department of State
If your argument that everything has happened because NATO and if NATO hadn't enlarged, Russia wouldn't have done anything is simply false. — ssu
And it's simply illogical to assume that you would annex territories if the only issue would preventing NATO enlargement and Ukraine being a bufferzone. — ssu
A show of force would already done that... — ssu
[...] It contains observations aimed at bringing some provisions in line with the European Convention on Human Rights of 1950, the Framework Convention for National Minorities of 1995, and the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages of 1992. — Daria Iulia Cotiuba
Of course, Russia invaded before the Ukrainian military was able to provide the kind of resistance that would have made a US intervention feasible, which is why the US hung them out to dry in the end. — Tzeentch
Nuclear posturing of late has been Russian and North Korean. The Kremlin appears to be going for a Cold War II. Incidentally, the kind of environment Putin was trained in, grew up in, knows, where he made some buddies. — Nov 20, 2023
Maybe the capable should start seriously talking about implementing a no-fly zone in Ukrainian airspace, iff the Ukrainian government wishes it.
Sending F-16s to Ukraine in fight against Russia would take 'months and months': Blinken
— Tal Axelrod · ABC · Jul 23, 2023
A Russian fighter jet fired flares at a US drone over Syria and damaged it, the US military says
— Lolita C Baldor, Tara Copp · AP · Jul 25, 2023
Then (if their government says so), any missiles violating that, warrants taking out the source of launch. Much like whatever other nation, here implemented by whatever coalition agreeing to help Ukraine. Once the Ukrainian skies are better cleared of offenders, civilians will be safer, the situation different, and more assessments warranted. That is, no tiptoeing inside Ukrainian airspace [...] — Jul 24, 2023
“Evil” in a moral sense? — neomac
No, 'evil' in a colloquial sense… — Tzeentch
...so why do you think “neocon foreign policy” deserves the title of “primary” cause of this war? — neomac
Because this conflict started when the United States (led by the neocon foreign policy establishment) expressed its desire to incorporate Ukraine into NATO, and they never over the course of some 15 years took Russia's objections seriously. — Tzeentch
So states do not enjoy moral rights but they enjoy legal rights like right to self-defence? How so? — neomac
States are not moral actors, so they have no moral rights. Individuals have moral rights.
And states obviously have legal rights because virtually all states on the world have signed the UN charter and thus recognize the legitimacy of international law, which includes a right to national self-defense. — Tzeentch
Besides if you acknowledge that Ukraine has a legal right to self-defence and the West is not violating international laws by military supporting Ukraine, what should we do with the “provocation” accusation from Putin which doesn’t look neither moral nor legal, in your views? — neomac
I'm not sure what 'provocation accusation' you're talking about, — Tzeentch
As you probably know, my view is that the Russians were provoked into invading Ukraine. — Tzeentch
It's clear to me that this war was purposefully provoked. — Tzeentch
.but what Europe should do is pull the plug on military support for Ukraine. Helping another nation exercise their right to self-defense is only rational if it has a chance of succeeding. There is no such chance in the case of the Ukraine war, and thus Europe should not contribute to the illusion that Ukraine can win this war. Stopping the support will hopefully will bring Ukraine to stop sacrificing its people in vain sooner rather than later — Tzeentch
If Ukraine wants to continue throwing its people's lives away, then that's their right. However, Europe should not make itself complicit in such a senseless waste of life. — Tzeentch
Is Putin’s aggression of Ukraine pure “evil” or just “necessary evil”? — neomac
The war in Ukraine is completely pointless and a shining example of the unnecessary evil of states - all states involved, including the state of Ukraine itself. — Tzeentch
Why not in the same way? What is the difference? — neomac
The difference is that Russia tried to find a diplomatic solution, but was snubbed by the Americans on every occasion.
Israel on the other hand did everything it could to prevent a diplomatic solution. — Tzeentch
Fitch anticipates the war will continue throughout 2024 within its current broad parameters. In our view, Ukraine still has some strategic military advantage, underpinned by strong resolve and Western military support, but its counteroffensive has made limited gains so far, and in our central scenario there is insufficient superiority to decisively deliver objectives.
We also consider there is an absence of politically credible concessions that could result in a negotiated end to the war, potentially leading to a very protracted conflict. Over a longer horizon, we anticipate some form of settlement, but view a 'frozen conflict' as more likely than a sustainable peace deal, at least for a significant period.
— Fitch Affirms Ukraine at 'CC' · Fitch Ratings · Dec 8, 2023
Helping another nation exercise their right to self-defense is only rational if it has a chance of succeeding. There is no such chance in the case of the Ukraine war, and thus Europe should not contribute to the illusion that Ukraine can win this war. — Tzeentch
↪neomac
You think playing coy is a way to be taken seriously on this forum?
Ask me three honest and straightforward questions, and I'll answer them for you. I have no patience for whatever game you're trying to play. — Tzeentch
↪neomac
This isn't primarily a philosophical discussion.
If you want to have a philosophical discussion, at least be so forthright as to clearly indicate what question or topic you want to discuss, rather than throwing up semantic smokescreens. What you're doing now smells of deflection and sophistry. — Tzeentch
* Nazi Germany Contemporary Russia (or the Kremlin) systematic oppression yes yes authoritarian yes yes state nationalism (e.g. "we are one" polemic) yes yes systematic propaganda yes yes systematic indoctrination (children) yes yes treatment of homosexuals :-( :-( human rights :-( :-( transparency no no freedom :-( :-( Nazis in employ well, yes yes intimidation (e.g. domestic power abuse) yes yes de facto judiciary independence no no (e.g. undermined) danger to neighbors (e.g. landgrabbery) yes yes ruthless (+ pride therein) yes yes (apparent) Nazi obsession yes yes shown willingness to change/improve where it matters no no had/has good people yes :-) yes :-)
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