↪unenlightened When the situation is sufficiently bleak, 'balanced' analysis just betrays an unwillingness to face reality.
Ukraine is strategically lost, and from such a position there are no tactical master strokes, unconventional military strategies or 'wunderwaffen' that can conceivably turn the tide. The worse one's situation becomes, the less options one has. — Tzeentch
In the long run, we are all dead. In the meantime, if one starts from the fundamental irrationality that the wasting asset of one's life is worth spending in a good cause, then one does not give up the hopeless cause, because that alternative is worse than failure and death. — unenlightened
Talks with the Russians / Ukrainian neutrality is a fate worse than death? — Tzeentch
There's nothing heroic about that. It's folly. Though the deaths of so many men is tragic to be sure. — Tzeentch
The idea of invading a country to ensure its neutrality is something worthy of the British Empire. — unenlightened
The "imperialist expansion" narrative lost all its credibility literally one month into the war. — Tzeentch
It was you that suggested that Ukraine was supposed to be neutral. If that is not the justification for the invasion, then it can only be that Ukraine is supposed to be part of Russia. — unenlightened
I would say that Ukraine was supposed to be independent. That is what we seem to disagree about. — unenlightened
That the Russians desire a neutral Ukraine is something that they've told us consistently over the course of some 15 years, and it's something they reiterated even after the invasion started. — Tzeentch
NATO membership wouldn't constitute independence — Tzeentch
What Ukraine did up until 2014 was true independence, — Tzeentch
I live in Europe/a NATO country. We're literally a vassal of the US, with our politcians being literal stooges for the US. There's nothing independent about my country. — Tzeentch
It would seem the Netherlands’ whole history would have had to be radically different in the 20th century for it to have a more powerful/independent position. — schopenhauer1
"True independence" is doing what Russia wants, [...] — unenlightened
In 2014 it made the critical error of jumping in bed with the US. — Tzeentch
Protesters opposed what they saw as widespread government corruption, abuse of power, human rights violations,(91) and the influence of oligarchs.(92) — Euromaidan
I think today's loss of independence started with end of the Cold War. That's when NATO and Europe's position with regards to the US fundamentally changed and Europe failed to notice (or noticed too late). — Tzeentch
Protesters opposed what they saw as widespread government corruption, abuse of power, human rights violations,(91) and the influence of oligarchs.(92) — Euromaidan
Protesters opposed what they saw as widespread government corruption and abuse of power, the influence of Russia and oligarchs, police brutality, human rights violations,(33)(34) and repressive anti-protest laws.(33) — Revolution of Dignity
Maybe return once Estonia Latvia Lithuania Finland Sweden Netherlands et al cancel their NATO memberships? — Aug 11, 2024
But then few outside the Baltic States and former Warsaw Pact countries could fathom how belligerent and utterly insane Russia would be with starting wars annexing territories from it's neighbors.But the position of low military spending relative to other European countries has remained, and thus it's only position is to be integrationist, not independent. It relies on the military support of others, and has no standing in regards to its hard power other than small support roles like it did in Afghanistan and Iraq. — schopenhauer1
Yet the Ukrainian attack into Kursk shows that evidently the war isn't over. — ssu
Not at all at this stage. Just look that they aren't from Moscow of St Petersburgh. And the fighting is in Russia.That seems sensible in purely military terms, though using conscripts is politically risky. — Echarmion
It makes sense from the Ukrainians if it lures Russian troops away from where they are focusing their assaults.It'll be interesting to see whether combat on this front if going to look significantly different from what we've mostly seen due to the absence of mines and heavy fortifications. — Echarmion
↪Tzeentch, alternatively, (once again) you deny Ukrainian agency, presuppose that it's not that they want democracy rights transparency freedom and wrestle free from the dominating (regressive opaque authoritarian oppressive) neighbor, — jorndoe
Incidentally, you're echoing what came out of the Kremlin. — jorndoe
But with Russia, this is totally natural and actually insignificant for those that want to see absolutely everything in the World just happening because of the evil US. But that's the repeated arguments for hundreds of pages now. — ssu
I mean I agree with all of this. I am not sure why a poster's hatred for the US and its inevitable hegemony after the Cold War would lead to rooting for Russian aggression. What's the end game for such a person? They want to see the rise of Russian hegemony to counter it? But why? What good would authoritarianism do, even if one disagreed with policies from the US. At some point, one must account that even if there are no "good guys", there are certainly "better guys", and Russia ain't that. — schopenhauer1
I'm not quite clear on why, in such a world, anyone would choose to not be a "US stooge", given that they all seem to be doing fine, while the alternative seems to be being targeted by coups and embroiled in wars. — Echarmion
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