This idea that Israel wants to push Palestine into the sea is a projection of what Palestine wants to do to Israel. If Israel wanted to fully annihilated Palestine, they could, but they don't. On the other hand, if Palestine could annihilate Israel, they would, but they can't. — Hanover
In [February, 2022], Amnesty International released a 280-page report showing how Israel was imposing an institutionalized regime of oppression and domination against the Palestinian people wherever it exercised control over their rights, fragmenting and segregating Palestinian citizens of Israel, residents of the OPT and Palestinian refugees denied the right of return. Through massive seizures of land and property, unlawful killings, infliction of serious injuries, forcible transfers, arbitrary restrictions on freedom of movement, and denial of nationality, among other inhuman or inhumane acts, Israeli officials would be responsible for the crime against humanity of apartheid, which falls under the jurisdiction of the ICC.
In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with
intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as
such:
[...]
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its
physical destruction in whole or in part;
For me it looks like an attack that Palestinians could well have planned themselves. — ssu
As in, now Israel will never get the Muslims to care about them now that they've gone and done this? — Hanover
Seems the strategic angle would be that the Palestinians would try to gain the affection of the Israelies, considering they have the power to destroy them. — Hanover
With the current lock down I don't think foreign backing is relevant. — Benkei
How does that really help? — ssu
And Hamas or the Palestinian authority don't the capability to train and arm such forces. — ssu
And moreover, Israel has no worries as it has a nuclear deterrence. And it's neighbors don't. — ssu
What did you think of Stradner's post (Sep 30, 2023)? — jorndoe
My belief is that the Israelis want peace and their enemies do not. — tim wood
Did you take my post as finger wagging? — Echarmion
↪Tzeentch, say, there are some marked differences between Kennedy (1917-1963) and Litvinenko (1962-2006). — jorndoe
Anything further on those NATO and coup things, by the way? — jorndoe
[...] but because it has this nihilistic and delusional vision where this will provoke Israel into the "final, apocalyptic, battle," they are fated to lose. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Just don't live in a building where you could accidentally fall out the window to your death. — Echarmion
Similar to what's come up before, suppose that Ukraine had ... ▸ declared neutrality with respect to international military alliance memberships, formally on paper / constitutionally; ▸ retained right to self-defense, e.g. from invaders (shouldn't be controversial), including foreign training and/or weaponry as the case may be; ▸ explicitly stated that others respect sovereignty, self-determination, freedom to seek own path (shouldn't be controversial); ▸ actively pursued EU membership, and perhaps sought other such cooperation ... Something along those lines.
The question is what might we then have expected from the Kremlin. Seems like they covered their bases, but what might have transpired then? — jorndoe
Pre-2014, some sort of commitment to neutrality backed up by action could have probably avoided this war.
War became virtually inevitable when Washington expressed its wishes to incorporate Ukraine into NATO, and then backed up that intention by supporting a coup and by starting to train and arm the Ukrainians.
Even if NATO membership was being held off, the Russians feared Washington would create a fait accompli when it started arming the Ukrainians to such an extent that in time the Russians wouldn't be able to object.
The importance of Ukraine is especially tied to Crimea and Sevastopol. Ukraine entering a rival military alliance would mean Russian access to the Black Sea and its strategic partners could be cut off at any point in time. It had a long-term lend lease deal, which Ukraine could simply cancel and then it would be up to Russia to invade, which would at that point be completely unfeasible.
Everybody involved at the political level is (or should be) aware of this, which is why Washington's attempt to change Ukraine's neutral status in 2008 and 2014 should be seen as a deliberate attempt at escalation.
EU membership may be a difficult point. The EU isn't a military alliance, but the Europhiles in Brussel certainly fantasize about turning the EU into a 'United States of Europe', with a European army, etc., which would essentially create the same situation as if Ukraine would join NATO. One could argue that such a situation is far away, but the nature of geopolitics is long-term.
Right now it will be very difficult to come to a peace agreement, since trust between Russia and the West has been completely shattered (it should be attempted regardless).
Russia is not going to return the territories it now occupies, simply because the trust isn't there to leave Crimea in the same vulnerable situation that it was in. That was the point of their invasion. And it is unlikely Ukraine (and Washington) would agree to a peace deal that doesn't return territory.
The harsh truth is that the rest of Ukraine is only of marginal importance to Russia and Washington, and it will likely end up being the pawn in the geopolitical game for years to come. I only see things getting worse for Ukraine. — Tzeentch
Regardless of NATO (and the US) — jorndoe
A move to democracy against corruption etc — jorndoe
I was called 'Pro-Putin' for just defending Dostoevsky... *sigh* — javi2541997
For me, it is clear that Washington is so interested in degrading Russia and pushing EU members against them. A terrible situation for both Europeans and Russians, but not for Americans. Yikes! — javi2541997
You calling it a "victory" for the Russians, tells more about you than about the Russians. — neomac
What might we then have expected from the Kremlin? — jorndoe
What's up with the repeated misrepresentation anyways? — jorndoe
What does winning the war mean exactly? — neomac
It is very much in our interest to support Ukraine, because they are fighting this war. We're not fighting it. — Kasja Ollongren
In a way of course supporting Ukraine is a very cheap way to make sure Russia with this regime is not a threat to the NATO alliance. — Kasja Ollongren
They even named the money, the amount of money that was spent on this coup. Everything is possible. — Putin
We've invested over 5 billion dollars to assist Ukraine in these and other goals, that will ensure a secure, prosperous and democratic Ukraine. — Victoria Nuland
A & B are in a war with each other. Both A & B claim that they - and they alone - have the right to rule / govern / control a particular piece of real estate. — EricH
And that expression of concerns has been generally understood to require world domination by force. — tim wood
As to refusing dialogue, that is simply a lie, and the speaker of it either a liar, ignorant, or stupid. Take your pick, combinations allowed. — tim wood
There's an argument to be made that it is the Russians themselves who have "no interest...". That it is the Russians themselves who choose, have long chosen, to live as enemies in a world that instead wants friends. That it is the Russians themselves who have been their own worst enemy. — tim wood
Clearly you don't know what you are talking about. — wonderer1
The depths at which the pipeline was damaged are within technical scuba diving range. — wonderer1
The pipeline is likely easy to spot on a modern 'fish finder'. — wonderer1
GPS controlled autopilot makes holding a position relatively simple... — wonderer1
That's all based on a hunch though [...] — Benkei
The estimates was hundreds of pounds of TNT btw, so not at impossible as you might think, [...] — Benkei
I don't know what your list of equipment is based on. — Benkei