So to you the dying of Ukrainian people is a principle thing ? You dont want that war to end, just keep going till the death toll is in the millions.Quisling or feckless Chamberlain, I can't decide.
So to you the dying of Ukrainian people is a principle thing ? You dont want that war to end, just keep going till the death toll is in the millions.Quisling or feckless Chamberlain, I can't decide.
It's their choice - I think that's a good principle, not pulling the rug out from under them so they fall under the murderous regime of a tyrant.
So no, you don't know why Russia invaded. Putin just woke up one day feeling peevish, and launched the flying monkeys. It's as good a reason as any, I suppose. And why let reality get in the way of a good narrative? Putin is evil, and that's all you need to know.Putin is evil. That seems a reasonable conclusion given all he has been up to over the years.
Killing his opponents, either by sending teams out to eliminate them, Salisbury etc, or by virtue of people becoming strangely accident prone once they have crossed him.
If you feel otherwise perhaps you could explain why?
As to the war. Putin believes that the break up of the Soviet Union was disastrous, he has often said this. Not unreasonable to infer that he would like to rectify that. So Ukraine the latest step in trying to rebuild the old empire?
Ukraine also has significant natural resources, so this may also be a factor.
Ukraine a sovereign nation, so it's invasion by Russia just wrong, and completely unjustified by any rational measure.
Again if you feel that is unreasonable then why?
As to Russian demands, I don't see that Russia has any right to demand anything.
Giving in to Russian demands is appeasement pure and simple.
And IMO it is important to consider that this is about the vanity of one man. I suspect if he dropped dead tomorrow the war would end very rapidly.
From my observations over the last 40 years, I'd say that when the USSR broke up and those states formed their own independence, Russia had appeared weaker to the world. They were not ony weak but fallible and had lost their credibility as a world power.A strange thread, full of strange assertions and regurgitated propaganda.
Russia is weak. Russia is evil. Putin is weak. Putin is evil. That's all you need to know, because "They" told me it is true.
Does anyone here actually know why this war started? What are the reasons for it, what the Russians demands, what will satisfy Russia? Or even when it started? Why it started? Who is at fault?
Anyone?
I think Putin wanted the break-away states back and set out to gain power and start the process.
BBC. Can't be true...If you've not watched it, this is an eye opener -
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episodes/p0d3hwl1/russia-19851999-traumazone
Military and civilian deaths there in WWII are conservatively estimated at 27 million. In Russia life is cheap - and certainly no great concern to Putin.The last estimate I saw estiated the Russian losses in the Ukraine 'action' at 700,000.
I am fully aware of a lot of reasons that have been put forward.So no, you don't know why Russia invaded. Putin just woke up one day feeling peevish, and launched the flying monkeys. It's as good a reason as any, I suppose. And why let reality get in the way of a good narrative? Putin is evil, and that's all you need to know.
There are reasons for the invasion, but they involve the West being its usual reprehensible, violent, psychopathic self.
The Russians view this war as existential. It's why they keep getting all these volunteers. Does anyone know the history of Kursk, and why it was therefore a truly insane place to invade with German tanks a second time if you want the Russians to come to an agreement? It's almost as if someone doesn't want the war to end...but I digress.
Back to the important questions: Why did Russia resort to a military incursion when they obviously weren't ready? What do they hope to gain? What are the minimum goals they will accept? This information is publicly available (unless you are blocked from accessing various parts of the Internet for your safety and comfort, that is).
Putin is a boomer. Unlike those born in the UK, he was brought into a world in which 20m+ Russians died in WW2, grew up and started his career during the heights of the cold war. Life (I suspect) was tough in the 1950-60s for a kid born to a factory worker and naval conscript.
The collapse of the Soviet Union would have tested his world view as he rose through the ranks.
The invasion of Crimea went unopposed by the West - possibly as it was culturally very closely aligned with Russia. Eastern Ukraine has similar close ties - culture, language etc. Concerned at the expansion of NATO and EU, Ukraine was an obvious target.
Before invasion I suspect he thought it would be a simple few week campaign (as did I) to the borders with Poland, Romania etc. He had massive weapons and manpower superiority, and the Crimea experience "proved" the reluctance of the west to get involved.
The West has provided just enough support to stall the conflict in static positions for the last two years - an bit of an advance here, a little retreat there. The question is - what now?
Assuming bringing the conflict to an end would be a good thing (there could be arguments for extending it indefinitely) the solution must be negotiated - there is no military option.
- withdraw further funding and support - Ukraine loses rapidly. Many dead. Putin bolstered. Potential further threat in Europe. Not a good solution for Ukraine or the West.
- continue providing "just enough" support - Russia will not want to acknowledge impotence or apparent defeat. War could drag on for years. Lots more dead. Would keep Russia occupied reducing further European conflict risk.
- increase support - it is a war Ukraine cannot "win" with troops in Red Square. Russia likely to escalate rather than surrender. Remember Afghanistan - Russia were there for 11 years before withdrawing.
This requires (a) that Putin has some reward he can sell to evidence "success" (redrawn borders), and (b) that Zelensky has no choice but to accept the outcome (do it or support is withdrawn).
The morality of such a settlement - possibly rewarding the aggressor - is questionable. But it may be the price necessary to end a destructive conflict.
What will happen next??
What will happen after that??
Good summary, thanks.Russia is weak. Russia is evil. Putin is weak. Putin is evil. That's all you need to know.
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