It's for them Ukrainians to decide on that question. Nobody is forcing Ukraine to fight. — Olivier5
For Ukraine to defend itself from an Russian attack is different from NATO attacking Russia. — ssu
And what are exactly the natural rights or concepts of justice or rights-not-claiming-anything-about-law that Zelensky has violated in not having a coalition with Russian party collaborationists? — neomac
For Zelensky, the desirable consequence of not having a coalition with Russian party collaborationists, is that the response to Russian invasion is going to be more resolute, military decisions are not going to be ratted on and therefore chances to regain control over occupied territories are greater. — neomac
“Up to the Ukrainians” means up to the governmental representatives of Ukraine that were democratically voted to act as such in peacetime and wartime? — neomac
Zelensky’s government has great support from Ukrainians, even despite the censorship that he rationally applied over press and opposition, even the losses they have suffered sofar. — neomac
Ordinary Ukrainians on the front lines are divided on a ceasefire and negotiations. My Ukrainian colleague Karina Korostelina and I surveyed the attitudes of both residents and displaced persons in three Ukrainian cities close to the southeast battlefields this summer. Almost half agreed it was imperative to seek a ceasefire to stop Russians killing Ukraine’s young men. Slightly more supported negotiations with Russia on a complete ceasefire, with a quarter totally against and a fifth declaring themselves neutral. Respondents were torn when considering whether saving lives or territorial unity were more important to them. Those most touched by the war, namely the internally displaced, were more likely to prioritise saving lives. Other research reveals that those farthest from the battlefields have the most hawkish attitudes
Political representatives do not delegate decisions to the people they represent, otherwise what the hell is their job supposed to be, people could literally decide everything by referendum. But it doesn’t work that way in normal times (there are no referendums on fiscal matters), go figure during wartime. I don’t know wars of national self-determination based on referenda, usually they are led by strong leaders with great popular support. — neomac
there are other forms of legitimacy that can be measured — neomac
there are some basics that you and other Pollyannas here do not seem to fully grasp when you so cheerfully cite Mearhsheimers&co — neomac
Isaac is playing fast and loose with the truth in saying that Ukraine banned opposition parties...one of the main opposition parties was banned — SophistiCat
the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine has decided that, given the full-scale war being waged by the Russian Federation and the ties that some political organizations have with that state, any activity of a number of political parties will be suspended pending martial law. Namely: Opposition Platform - For Life, Sharij’s Party, Nashi, Opposition Bloc, Left Opposition, Union of Left Forces, Derzhava, "Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine, Socialist Party of Ukraine, the Socialists, and Volodymyr Saldo’s Bloc," said Zelensky.
Amendments to the Law of Ukraine “On Political Parties in Ukraine”, banning “pro-Russian parties”, were passed by Parliament and signed into law in May 2022. The cases brought by the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine against 16 opposition parties — https://schillerinstitute.com/blog/2022/09/25/update-on-the-banning-of-opposition-political-parties-in-ukraine/
suppose a higher quality of sorcery is likelier to have an effect. — NOS4A2
It seems as if people have long forgotten that similar wars where on one Super Power's enemy was eagerly supported by the other Super Power were more of the norm in the Cold War. — ssu
The dim view you have of the Ukrainian government has no immediate bearing on their stated purpose to restore their territory. — Paine
The issue is how far support from other nations will go to achieve this goal. — Paine
It’s nice to know my words have an effect on you. Yours as well. And such an effect they’ve had that we’ve adopted each other’s positions. — NOS4A2
There is also the ideological premise that it is rational and honorable to defend one's country against a foreign invader. — _db
The answer to who is calling the shots relates to how an end to the war can be negotiated. — Paine
What do you mean by "right" and "justification" as distinguished from "lawful"? — neomac
What's your point in highlighting the consequences? What lesson is there to learn in there? — neomac
These consequences are things seriously considered in every place where serious discussion about the war is happening, but in this thread, such dismissal is somehow approved to be a valid disagreement regardless of how weak any premisses is in support of such disagreements are. — Christoffer
Ukraine’s battlefield successes could go too far. If the defense of Ukraine is not worth U.S. boots on the ground, then the return of all of the Donbas and Crimea to Ukrainian control is not worth risking a new world war.
pushing for Russia’s total defeat is an unnecessary gamble.
A hypothetical deal between Russia and Ukraine would have two main components. First, Ukraine would back away from its intention to join NATO — an objective that has for years provoked strong Russian opposition. Russia has legitimate security concerns about NATO setting up shop on the other side of its 1,000-mile-plus border with Ukraine.
Second — the harder part — Moscow and Kyiv would need to arrive at a territorial settlement. A reasonable starting point for negotiations would be to aim for a Russian withdrawal to the “line of contact” that existed before Russia’s invasion began in February. Diplomacy could then focus on the ultimate disposition of Crimea and the chunk of the Donbas that Russia occupied in 2014. Both sides would need to compromise: Moscow to abandon its recently announced intention to annex a major slice of eastern Ukraine, and Kyiv to settle for an outcome that could entail less than regaining all its land.
The point is that that’s a rational goal, because when national sovereignty/security is in severe danger there must be enough convergence and commitment on matter of national sovereignty/security for a coalition between otherwise opposing parties to efficaciously deal with such an emergency. — neomac
I wasn't wondering why it was the case. I was pointing out one of the consequences of it being the case. — Isaac
If that’s how you understand legitimacy, you better clarify it because: — neomac
BTW is Putin a legitimate leader according to your way of understanding political legitimacy? — neomac
It’s rational to act in accordance to democratic rules under the assumption that there are sufficiently robust democratic institutions. While a central government which is still struggling for its sovereignty and territorial control, can’t operate under such assumption. Obviously. — neomac
I wasn't wondering why it was the case. I was pointing out one of the consequences of it being the case. — Isaac
that’s how I can discover where our notions diverge, for example. And if we aren’t sharing same notions, I can still question your notions. — neomac
How do you disregard the fact of Russia's war crimes? The fact of China's interest in Taiwan? The fact of North Korea's recent aggressions? The fact of how Russia treats its own people? The fact of people being killed when opposing Putin? — Christoffer
People have not "disregarded" domino effects, they just disagree with you about what they are, how likely they are, and how to measure them. — Isaac
These are facts and a solid foundation for any speculation that revolves around the possible consequences of just letting Russia get what they want. — Christoffer
These consequences are things seriously considered in every place where serious discussion about the war is happening — Christoffer
Mods should rename this thread to "Strawman discussion about the Ukraine war", because that's basically what this thread is. — Christoffer
the black-and-white point of view where everything is only about a life-and-death dichotomy — Christoffer
What I call naive is the black-and-white point of view where everything is only about a life-and-death dichotomy because that is, objectively, an extremely simplified way of looking at this conflict, disregarding any domino effect of short-term decisions just to save lives in the here and now. — Christoffer
What "cost" is worth it when the consequence of giving in to Russia's demands may be much more severe than people seem to realize? — Christoffer
Or you could try and explain what you mean a bit better. — Olivier5
it’s preposterous to expect a coalition between opposing parties that see one another as the enemies: it’s like expecting the Federal government to form a coalition with confederates during the Civil War, or the coalition that fought against the fascists in Italy build the new state by including the fascist party. — neomac
I wasn't wondering why it was the case. I was pointing out one of the consequences of it being the case. — Isaac
He got the mandate when he was elected as president for peacetime and wartime. — neomac
Since there is large support for Zelensky it’s preposterous to question his legitimacy just because he didn’t build a coalition with Russian collaborationist parties. — neomac
Besides we have a different notion of political legitimacy. — neomac
I think the discussion about legitimacy is irrelevant. — Benkei
Do Ukrainians deserve to be protected against Russian aggression — Benkei
I think so. — Olivier5
if one feels the sacrifice is wrong, then they should discourage it. If one feels the price is worth paying, they ought not. — Down The Rabbit Hole
It has been suggested on here before by pronatalists that because of their miserable lives, antinatalists are looking at the world through excrement-tinted glasses. I can't say this is true of all antinatalists, but I believe this accounts for a significant number. Of-course the opposite is also true - if you're living a pleasant life, the sacrifice is worth it - why would you throw all the wonders we experience away, just because some people suffer. — Down The Rabbit Hole
You are the one debasing democracy when you stupidly propose that an elected president has no mandate. — Olivier5
wasn't speaking generally of populations who support war. I was expanding on my comment that is germane in the present circumstances: — Paine
Such circumstances would also reduce the support Ukraine receives from other nations and increase the number of those who view the Ukraine government as an equivalent of the Diem regime in the Vietnam war. — Paine
The country is as at war, so democracy can not function as normal: e.g. do you have any examples of countries invaded by a foreign power that run democratic presidential elections while at war? I don't. — neomac
Zelensky is the president so he has the legitimate mandate to be the president also during wartime according to the Ukrainian constitution (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/President_of_Ukraine#Duties_and_powers). What's so hard to understand, dude? — neomac
hasn't verbal fire mostly been directed at Russian politics and Putin + team? Rather than all Russians I mean? — jorndoe
you think a chaotic Russian "Viva la revolución" is likely here? — jorndoe
You really think that's realistic (or a game-changer)? There hasn't been much indication that the autocrat circle is going away. — jorndoe
Hmm I kind of like the other potential development, the Russian justice system pulling weight — jorndoe
it's all conjecture and idle speculation. — jorndoe
the Ukrainian government have banned opposition parties, censored opposition press — Isaac
For the time being, I'm guessing (conjecture on my part) that it's a (perhaps panicky) response to old news — jorndoe
Russo-hate has grown in Ukraine, around here we don't particularly hate Russians. — jorndoe
They would not have the same level of support that has allowed them to repulse the Russians as much as they have. — Paine
The people fighting would not view the change of government as significant if the leadership was as brutal as the Russians. — Paine
Both factors shape any kind of negotiated deal. — Paine
don't know, except, in principle, no — jorndoe
a degenerative path/trend (toward an unknown future)? — jorndoe
oust the autocrat circle, then new paths would open up — jorndoe
Where have I said that they don't represent the Ukrainian people? — Isaac
There's no such entity as 'the Ukrainians' to even ask. — Isaac — Paine
Russia claims ... that Ukraine is an integral part of their nation. — Paine
If the Ukrainians are found to employ anything like the disinformation regime used by Russia on their citizens or conduct the war as barbarously as they have, that would make your method weighing of the cost of surrender against the cost of resistance more reasonable. — Paine
In this case, the existence of the state is directly tied to its legitimacy as an 'entity' of the Ukrainians. — Paine
While the vast majority may live happy lives, the hundreds of millions with lives of unbearable suffering are the sacrifice for this. I think there's a fair argument that this should be discouraged. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I guess some don't want to get dragged along downhill, and some don't want to implicitly or explicitly assent to (reinforce/encourage/support) the regress.
Why would anyone jump onto a degenerative path/trend (toward an unknown future)? — jorndoe
the point I was making is that you and Russia don't consider it representative of the people who live there. — Paine
You do not regard that government to be legitimate agents of those people — Paine
You say:
There's no such entity as 'the Ukrainians' to even ask. — Paine
Whatever agreements made by that government would have to be accompanied by an acceptance by Russia that such a state exists. That is going to take far more than the grudging acceptance of Minsk II — Paine
invading the entire country put an end on Ukraine having sovereignty. — Paine
It is absurd to think one could recognize a government but "fix" their leadership with "denazification." — Paine
Claiming this is the case is a form of denying the existence of the Ukranian state. — Paine
After adding up this subtraction of Ukranian identity to the views put forward by many here that the Ukranian state is merely a proxy for NATO powers, I resubmit the proposal that the thousands of comments on this thread mostly concern whether Ukraine is a nation represented by its present government. — Paine
I'm just trying to show how ludicrous your ideas are. Of course that doesn't go through to you, but others might benefit. — ssu
Suppose, for the sake of argument, that the ...
Veracity of statements by Donald Trump (Wikipedia)
... has played a role, i.e. inflammatory bullshit, lying, or whatever. If so, then would there be an argument somewhere here against false agitational speech or abuse of free speech? — jorndoe
You have to understand that basically Russia is an imperialist nation trying to cling on to it's old colonies and conquered countries. Some countries, like Switzerland, can make it quite well as having ethnic minorities, but Russia is basically a country that has conquered these lands and people. And is desperately trying to do that now. — ssu
Are you now saying that this war is just and must be fought, but it'd be nice if someone ALSO tried a little diplomacy? — Olivier5
Your bullet points of questions refer to a Ukrainian state. A generous portion of the 11,300 comments on this thread concern whether it exists or not. It is lost or found between the interests of Russian and other nations. — Paine
What would be (or have been) the consequences to the Ukrainian people if the Ukrainian state ceded (or had ceded) territory to the Russian state? — _db
What would be (or have been) the consequences to the Russian people if the Russian state withdrew from occupied Ukrainian territory (or never invaded in the first place)? — _db
What would be (or have been) the long-term geopolitical consequences if the Ukrainian state ceded (or had ceded) territory to the Russian state? — _db
What would be (or have been) the long-term geopolitical consequences if the Russian state had withdrew from occupied Ukrainian territory (or never invaded in the first place)? — _db