yet it looked like Chomsky was the dill from my vantage point! — invizzy
Ukraine was neutral and there was large support for Ukraine being and staying neutral... until Russia made it's land grab and started this long war. — ssu
If you take away from the view what Russia has done and just focus on the US, you simply paint a biased picture which isn't truthful. — ssu
izing. The “assurances” you refer to are just false— you’re overlooking events from 2008 onward.
— Xtrix
If you don't take into account the hostility and aggression of Russia, the territorial annexations and talk of Ukraine being an artificial country etc. then you are simply denying that Russia's actions here do matter. — ssu
Perhaps you don't understand political discourse. — ssu
But it's members can surely de facto give that to Russia and had given that to Russia when it came to Ukraine. But this fact seems to evade you. — ssu
Ukraine wasn't let into NATO. Not for two decades. That is a fact. And extremely likely that would have continued because Russia could easily pressure this. Far more easily than making an all-out invasion on Ukraine. — ssu
How can territorial annexations be less important? — ssu
I’m biased towards emphasizing the role of the US because it’s where I live.
— Xtrix
You should not be biased. — ssu
Understanding that people look differently at things doesn't mean that there cannot be objectivity. — ssu
You do understand that attacking Ukraine on February 24th changed a lot? — ssu
Did it? Really, look at that text you quoted.
But Putin has had notable success in blocking NATO membership for its former Soviet neighbors — Ukraine and Georgia. — ssu
And then that was in 2008. That it was said over fourteen years ago and again just proves my point. — ssu
And Scholz made that statement THIS YEAR. — ssu
It was never was about NATO membership in the first place — ssu
The simple undeniable fact is that Putin could have prevented Ukraine's NATO membership with far less than attacking Ukraine. — ssu
Hence it's bizarre to cling on to this idea that "NATO made Putin do it". — ssu
the exchange with Chomsky was cringeworthy. — I like sushi
So Putin had his assurances that Ukraine would not be in NATO prior attacking Ukraine. — ssu
“There is no change, there will be no change,” Blinken said when asked whether the formal response delivered to Moscow includes any alteration to NATO’s “open door policy,” which states that membership in the alliance is open to any European country that is in a position to “contribute to the security of the North Atlantic area.”
It is true.
Bush ago something years ago. Even if he would be a President for life in the US, it's not his decision. It is totally another thing for Ukraine to get into NATO. — ssu
The Kremlin realizes it doesn't have the power to force the West to reverse its recognition of Kosovo's independence or persuade Washington to drop its plan to deploy missile defenses in Poland and the Czech Republic.
But Putin has had notable success in blocking NATO membership for its former Soviet neighbors — Ukraine and Georgia.
"Georgia's accession into NATO will be seen here as an attempt to trigger a war in the Caucasus, and NATO membership for Ukraine will be interpreted as an effort to foment a conflict with Russia," said Sergei Markov, a Russian parliament member with close links to the Kremlin.
Amid a litany of such threats from Moscow, some NATO members are reluctant to inflame tensions at the three-day summit that begins Wednesday in Bucharest.
On Monday, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said admitting the two countries to NATO was "not a matter of whether, but when." However, he said the launch of the membership process might be delayed at this week's gathering.
We reiterate the decision made at the 2008 Bucharest Summit that Ukraine will become a member of the Alliance with the Membership Action Plan (MAP) as an integral part of the process; we reaffirm all elements of that decision, as well as subsequent decisions, including that each partner will be judged on its own merits.
Russia has been mentioning Ukraine as a red line for decades. The West didn't listen.
— Manuel
No. Actually the West did. Ukraine wasn't going to go into NATO. Period.
But then Russia started to annex territories of Ukraine. — ssu
I'm guessing a neutral but independent Crimea would be unacceptable to Putin. Any chance of that? — jorndoe
While it is obvious that the fighters cannot be decoupled from what supports them, treating Ukraine as merely a pawn in a geopolitical game is not going to lead to an end of the war. — Paine
Ukrainian neutrality and recognition of the Donbas/Crimea annexations by Ukraine in exchange for peace is a good compromise to you? — neomac
I think I've only seen one poster here supporting Russia and saying Ukraine is part of Russia, though I have not seen him post here in a while. — Manuel
Everybody else that I've seen, takes it as a given, that this war is a crime. I mean, it's obvious, I can't believe it has to be said all the time. — Manuel
Well, let's try. — ssu
And then they can take the line of Noam Chomsky that only Russians themselves ought to be critical about their country, Russia, and we ought to stick to being critical of only our own country / alliance. — ssu
Now, yes. Never say never though. — Olivier5
You are being ridiculously sensitive, taking criticism of your position as criticism of yourself. — apokrisis
Instead, the US could discreetly ask Turkey or the UN to do it. — Olivier5
Or rather, let others do it, and quietly encourage them. — Olivier5
If the US was seen as pushing for negotiations, it would weaken Ukraine's hand in those negotiations. — Olivier5
I think it overlooks the fact that the US helped provoke this war, and that this is also a great opportunity to weaken an enemy by proxy — all under the cover of merely helping the underdogs who are being attacked by a madman.
— Xtrix
Which in the end you cannot disprove. — ssu
Insults? — apokrisis
Biden would have no credibility in that role. — Olivier5
But the US level of provocation was tiny compared to the level of Russian escalation. — apokrisis
Do you think the Obama and the Trump years somehow left Putin no choice? Or that Biden arrived and suddenly Putin saw a leader of cunning and flair? In poker terms, Putin had to go all in on whatever cards were in his hand? — apokrisis
But in this conflict, you can’t claim the US engineered events. And you can’t blame it for taking advantage if a cheap opportunity now presents itself. — apokrisis
You might wish that humanity was somehow different from what it is. The first step would be to start by accepting it as it is with an accurate assessment. — apokrisis
I side with analysts like Peter Zeihan who stress that the US has always tended towards isolationism because of its geography. It just needs to secure Canada and Mexico as part of its North American hegemony and life is sweet. Anything more is gravy. — apokrisis
It owns a lion’s share of the US debt, — apokrisis
So your geopolitical analysis builds in outdated neocon presumptions about the US’s self interests. — apokrisis
it is better off becoming the isolationist regime that always made the most self-interested geopolitical sense. — apokrisis
China is also about to fall off its demographic cliff. Let it try to pivot to an economics of domestic consumption as the US pulls all its manufacturing back to cheap and reliable Mexico. — apokrisis
Of course it will take another 10 years for the whole US system to itself reorientate to this new reality. — apokrisis
A neocon analysis is so 1990s - even if it is true that large chunks of US institutional thinking might be still stuck in that time warp. — apokrisis
Hope I have shown that my narrative is based on the world as it is, even if that is also a world in transition. — apokrisis
Yep, occasionally I reuse/post stuff from those text files, and yep I do type the darn forum code in myself. — jorndoe
Crimea wasn’t a step too far. Donbas separatism wasn’t a step too far. But taking over Ukraine to add to Belarus as part of the new Russian empire expanding back towards its “rightful” place in the world is where you might want to rationally call a halt. And given the chance of a people only too eager to lead their own fight, the US at last had a chance just to spend the dollars and not get directly involved in the way that always goes wrong. — apokrisis
The basic idea is that the reason Putin invaded is that nobody did anything when he took Crimea. It was nothing but positive for him. — frank
So the notion is that if we don't punch Russia in the nose now, it's going to continue taking things. — frank
I would think that after Bucha and all the other crime scenes, it's easy to understand why the Ukrainians would want revenge and wouldn't be interested in diplomacy. — Olivier5
On the US side, they have the Red Army right where they want it: in a trap. It is also easy to understand why they don't press for diplomacy. — Olivier5
To put it simply, the U.S. position that the war must continue to severely weaken Russia, blocking negotiations, is based on a quite remarkable assumption: that facing defeat, Putin will pack his bags and slink away to a bitter fate. He will not do what he easily can: strike across Ukraine with impunity using Russia’s conventional weapons, destroying critical infrastructure and Ukrainian government buildings, attacking the supply hubs outside Ukraine, moving on to sophisticated cyberattacks against Ukrainian targets. All of this is easily within Russia’s conventional capacity, as U.S. government and the Ukrainian military command acknowledge — with the possibility of escalation to nuclear war in the not remote background.
The assumption is worth contemplating. It is too quickly evaded.
Still, I didn't know that Johnson had (alledgedly) this effect on Zelensky. — Olivier5
“we want to see Russia weakened to the degree that it can't do the kinds of things that it has done in invading Ukraine."
US officials, however, had previously been reluctant to state as plainly that the US' goal is to see Russia fail, and be militarily neutered in the long term, remaining cautiously optimistic that some kind of negotiated settlement could be reached.
So one cannot say that the US is evidently blocking negotiations. It is not. — Olivier5
I grant you that the US is not encouraging negotiations either. — Olivier5
So what would happen if Biden or anyone else would try and "force" Ukraine to initiate peace negotiations? Only more posturing. — Olivier5
