People in the UK are Europeans, actually. :wink: — ssu
Deterrence stops Putin. — ssu
Sweden and Finland both have this thing called "total defense". — ssu
I don't know how much more evidence one needs to know that Russia is being serious. It is being left without options. — Manuel
I wager that the Americans view 'limited nuclear war' as an excellent means of taking out two potential geopolitical rivals who stand to benefit from a US-China war: Russia and Europe. — Tzeentch
What you'll have is a total curling up in the foetal position while our countries are incinerated. — Tzeentch
Exactly.We stood at the precipice of annihilation during the Cuban missile crisis or on the few occasions when a detection error almost set off a nuclear exchange. The current situation doesn't seem remotely close to those situations. — Echarmion
How is Russia without options? The russian state is not remotely threatened. They're facing more difficult logistics and aerial campaigns which might eventually degrade their capacity to fight in Ukraine but not immediately. Even if Russia's offensive momentum is completely halted it would be able to negotiate, given how difficult it has been for Ukraine to make any headway against heavy fortifications.
This is bad for Russia but not "mutual suicide is our only option" levels of bad.
Why do you think Russia might use a nuclear weapon? What would be their goal? — Echarmion
No, It isn't. Ukrainians are totally capable using those weapon systems themselves. Besides, Ukraine has had cruise missiles and artillery missiles for a long time.But it is US and UK soldiers using US and UK machinery firing into Russia. — Manuel
Imagine the US invading Cuba or Mexico, then these countries attacking Florida Keys or municipalities near the Rio Grande. If they have a possibility to do that, why not?Imagine Russian missiles being shot with Russian technology from Cuba into the US. What would happen? — Manuel
That's right this does not threaten them. But it is US and UK soldiers using US and UK machinery firing into Russia. — Manuel
Imagine Russian missiles being shot with Russian technology from Cuba into the US. What would happen? — Manuel
They probably will hit Ukraine very hard — Manuel
But if these attacks continue, they have to reply in kind to the US or Britain. — Manuel
What provocation or escalation is attacking ammo dumps? It's totally logical to destroy the ammo dumps of the enemy. It's not that Ukraine is doing pure revenge bombing and shooting missiles into Russia hospitals (as the Russians do in Ukraine). Ukraine is fighting for it's survival in an all out war. Why would it have to fight with one arm tied to it's back. It's simply nonsense to think otherwise.This isn't deterrence. This is provocation and escalation, and it achieves nothing besides those two things. — Tzeentch
Are you implying that's not what they have been doing? — Echarmion
Why though? They don't actually "have to" do anything. This really reminds me of the talk about the invasion itself. Oh Russia "had to" do it because of provocations X, Y and Z. But we're talking about strategic decisions and countries are very well able to take a loss and roll with it. — Echarmion
Last I saw Kiev was functioning. It wasn't like Baghdad was left.
I mean full and total devastation of Kiev. — Manuel
Yeah, in an ideal world they would just take hits and not do anything. This is not that world. — Manuel
Yeah, they will take more land. It might be a forever war. But negotiations have to happen. — Manuel
Ukraine simply cannot beat Russia now the numbers don't add up. — Manuel
There are no forever wars.Yeah, they will take more land. It might be a forever war. — Manuel
Yet winning never has been that Victory Parade on the Red Square for Ukraine.Ukraine simply cannot beat Russia now the numbers don't add up. — Manuel
Yet it is important to remember that strategic decisions still happen. If there was an inescapable spiral of escalation, then the soviet union would have attacked the US navy ships blocking the shipping lanes to Cuba. They did not though. — Echarmion
And negotiations will happen. Everyone is aware that the war must end with negotiations. How else could it be? The question is how one-sided the negotiations will be. — Echarmion
A situation where either Russia or Ukraine are building up for the next round to address their grievances isn't stable. A situation where the West leaves Ukraine by the wayside to be absorbed in the Russian orbit would badly damage the cohesion and credibility of NATO.
On the other extreme a destabilised Russia would be volatile and cause all kinds of future security risks. Again it's a strategic calculation. It's not simply about a binary win/ lose outcome. — Echarmion
There are no forever wars.
All wars, even the Hundred years war, came to an end. The longest conflict that are going are the Kurdish insurgencies. Another long conflict is the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Even they aren't active all the time. But nothing close to forever. — ssu
Yet winning never has been that Victory Parade on the Red Square for Ukraine. — ssu
Armus: I am a skin of evil, left here by a race of Titans, who believed if they rid themselves of me, they would free the bonds of destructiveness.
Picard: You say you are true evil? Shall I tell you what true evil is? It is to submit to you. It is when we surrender our freedom, our dignity instead of defying you. — Skin of Evil (1988)
Deterrence stops Putin. Appeasement won't. — ssu
As you probably already know, we were literally one word away from nuclear war in the Cuban Missile Crisis.
We can't keep playing tightrope forever, eventually someone will fall and by extension everyone else will. — Manuel
I don't see a world in which Russia retreats from the territories they conquered in this war. They would rather commit collective suicide. I just don't see them doing this. — Manuel
Maybe I am completely wrong - maybe they will in some future scenario, swap land for peace. But then Ukraine can never be a part of NATO.
No option here is one in which Ukraine has a favorable hand. It's a question of how much they will lose. They can lose more or lose less. That's how I see it. — Manuel
But why does NATO exist? It's stated goal was to defend against the Soviet Union. That collapsed and NATO remained. — Manuel
You are probably aware that Putin asked Clinton is Russia could join NATO but was rejected. Had Russia been in NATO, this war would not have occurred. — Manuel
They only remaining "threat" is China. They're a threat to Taiwan. Not to the world. — Manuel
Well, comes to mind a small curious anecdote: one of the longest conflicts happened between Sweden and San Marino. You see the tiny nation of San Marino, which was on the Catholic side, and protestant Sweden didn't make peace in treaty of Westphalia, hence the two states were technically at war until 1996. I assume that no Swede noticed this belligerent status of his or her country in the 1980's when visiting San Marino.I was replying to your comment. Of course, literally, no war is forever. But they can be very long, like Korea, which is still ongoing. — Manuel
Why then didn't the Ukrainians denazify themselves then?Winning is stopping the killing. What other winning is there? That Russia is defeated- that they go back pre-invasion days? That's not going to happen. — Manuel
1. Europe and Russia are parts of the world the US will no longer be able to control going into the future.
2. Europe and Russia will play a critical role in keeping China's economy afloat in case of a US-China war.
3. Europe and Russia being in pole position to benefit greatly from a US-China war, and probably becoming the laughing thirds of such a conflict. — Tzeentch
And yet what is the alternative? A principled stance for peace will not prevent someone else from pursuing their goals through war, and always avoiding escalation just hands all the cards to the other side. It's not a practical strategy if you care about the outcome. — Echarmion
That seems like a very bleak outlook. What makes you so pessimistic about this? — Echarmion
And thus they should give up? Or what is the conclusion you're arriving at here? — Echarmion
I find this an odd question. NATO has been very successful. There have been no overt attacks on any NATO member. Who would dismantle a successful system of mutual defense? What possible interest could that serve? — Echarmion
I'd be curious as to what your source of information on this is. As far as I know there were informal talks behind closer doors, the details of which aren't public. Reportedly Russia asked for some kind of special status within NATO.
Perhaps NATO could have been more accommodating. But perhaps also Russia should not have made demands at that time. — Echarmion
What qualifies as a "threat to the world"? Was the Soviet Union a threat to the world? Was Germany in 1914?
On the one hand, most people just want peace and prosperity. On the other hand there are clearly different visions as to how the future world looks, and they're not equally appealing from where I stand. — Echarmion
Hence Ukraine can get / could have gotten a better deal like Japan or Poland. Why is this so difficult to understand? Why the defeatism? There'd be no Finns, we'd be basically Russians just like the Mari people or other Finno-Ugric people in Russia if we would have that kind of defeatist attitude, if we would never had fought for our independence. — ssu
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