Ukraine has been fighting against Russia's occupation of Crimea since 2014, a move Trump praised at the time, and actually parrotted Putin's assertions that Crimea is Russian. What makes you think Putin would have hesitated to attack Ukraine if Trump were still in office? Trump's isolationism, and criticism of NATO, would have been the best possible situation for Putin.I think there's a non-trivial chance that it wouldn't have happened under Trump — Tzeentch
What makes you think Putin would have hesitated to attack Ukraine if Trump were still in office? Trump's isolationism, and criticism of NATO, would have been the best possible situation for Putin. — Relativist
That project sought the incorporation of Ukraine into NATO, and zero attention was paid to Russia's many objections, who spoke about red lines, fundamental security threats, etc. — Tzeentch
I'm not aware of any members of the Trump administration handing out cookies on the Maidan. — Tzeentch
To many people's dismay, Putin and Trump kinda liked each other. — Tzeentch
What I'm trying to make clear is that Biden has been a disaster in his own right. — Tzeentch
the US blocked UN Security Council resolutions calling for a cease fire, and expressed its unconditional support for Israel. — Tzeentch
The US has blocked a cease fire several times already. — Tzeentch
A resolution calling for a cease fire is not a cease fire. Both sides in the conflict must agree to a cease fire. It is not as if they did and the US blocked it. — Fooloso4
The Maidan conflict predates Trump and cannot be blamed on Biden. — Fooloso4
What I'm trying to make clear is that Biden has been a disaster in his own right. — Tzeentch
Except you haven't. — Fooloso4
He wants people at home to feel like everything is fine, and it's not going to be without that boost to the economy from the war. — frank
Biden was VP during the Maidan, and Ukraine was his portfolio. Of course he was involved. — Tzeentch
The entire current administration was involved in the Maidan. Ukraine is their project, and it crashed and burned in a most spectacular fashion, sadly taking Ukraine itself along with it. — Tzeentch
You don't think the Biden administration has been an unmitigated disaster? Ok. — Tzeentch
I suppose it will forever remain a mystery to you then why people vote Trump. — Tzeentch
I don't know. You'd have to ask a Russian resident. — frank
Are you blaming the entire current administration? — Fooloso4
Nonsense. Putin couldn't countenance a pro-West Ukraine. Ukraine has been moving toward the West since 2004, when the pro-Russian President (Yanukovych) lost to Yushchenko. Yushchenko began the push to join the EU and NATO, which has continued. Putin's invasion was inevitable.I don't think the Russians wanted to invade Ukraine at all. They did so because they felt they had no other option. If the US hadn't pressed its wishes to incorporate Ukraine, this war could have been avoided entirely. — Tzeentch
Putin couldn't countenance a pro-West Ukraine. — Relativist
No, it's Russia's fault. Ukraine was neutral when Russia invaded in 2014. Russia had signed the Budapest Memorandum in 1994 (along with the US and UK), committing to respect the independence and sovereignty of Ukraine in exchange for their giving up the nukes. Independence and sovereignty gives them the right to see economic alliances. They were seeking such economic alliances with the West (seeking to join the EU), while remaining "non-bloc" (militarily neutral). Ukraine was driven toward military alignment with the West in response to Russian aggression. You're blaming the West for failing to appease Russia's aggression.Ukraine is primarily the West's fault. Had Ukraine remained committed to neutrality, — Tzeentch
That project sought the incorporation of Ukraine into NATO, and zero attention was paid to Russia's many objections, who spoke about red lines, fundamental security threats, etc. — Tzeentch
I don't know how anyone can seriously deny US involvement in the Maidan coup and the dumpster fire that it turned into today. — Tzeentch
I attribute primary (though not all) responsibility to the US, and the people in the US that orchestrated it are sitting in the White House right now. — Tzeentch
Why do you say that? — frank
They'remore likely toinserting covert operatives/agents in such cases. — Dec 25, 2023
I'm just thinking that the Kremlin can't be that dumb. — jorndoe
you missed our discussion about — frank
Are you aware that this is a standard Trumpian rhetorical tactic, claiming that everyone knows or everyone says or everyone thinks? — Fooloso4
I don't know how anyone can seriously deny US involvement in the Maidan coup — Tzeentch
Protesters opposed what they saw as widespread government corruption and abuse of power, the influence of oligarchs, police brutality, and human rights violations.(29)(30) Repressive anti-protest laws fuelled further anger.(29) — Revolution of Dignity (Wikipedia)
A covert conspiracy for Ukraine to become a modern democracy, eh? — jorndoe
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