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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
Your second paragraph outlines entirely why it’s a fools errand. Their capabilities are defined by people with no interest in their success or survival. If anything the next White House could be worse - the best outcome is the status quo.
The policy is flawed because Ukraine cannot win, will not return to 2022 borders and not recapture Crimea. Conscripting Ukrainian men in this full knowledge, essentially being lied to by their own Government that has censored all opposition, is the objectionable part. In World War 2 everyone had the same goal. |
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Not everyone resourcing Ukraine has the exact same goal. |
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Link to journalist intimidation from that well known Putin mouthpiece “the Guardian”: https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...-intimidate-us My view is Zelensky has gone much further, even setting aside 20th century principles being applied in a 21st century war. He’s banned parties that added up to over 2 million votes at the last parliamentary election. Banning trade unions silences the voices of largely working class men who will be sacrificed in this escapade given the levels of corruption that will ensure the political class, their sons and their brothers dodge the draft. In World War 2 the Chamberlain government collapsed. I doubt there’s any mechanism by which Ukrainian opposition to Zelensky (within his own party or the opposition that haven’t been banned) to do the same. Other than the previous mentioned bullet, of course. |
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Intimidation of the press in Ukraine Quote:
https://rsf.org/en/country/russia Quote:
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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
It would strike me as an extremely low bar if your definition of an acceptable level of freedom of the press under the Zelensky regime was to be roughly similar to, or slightly better than, a country you’d all roundly condemn.
On paper at least the D notice system seems significantly different from the press intimidation reported in the Guardian article I linked to above - where conscription and intimidation by the intelligence community is cited as a method of silencing legitimate journalism. If the UK did that in World War 2 that’d be worthy of condemnation not a defence of Ukraine’s actions. Comparing practices a century ago to now is once again questionable since technology allows greater availability of international news, satellites and even social media footage allows for greater tracking of troop movements and other resources in a way that simply wasn’t possible for the average person (and also the enemy) in the 1940s. The argument for censorship for security reasons has never been weaker - although I accept it exists the accusation against Ukraine from journalists was this went beyond that in any case. |
Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
"Roughly similar to, or slightly better"?
<snigger> 61st vs 162nd out of 180 countries… Oh, no - you’re definitely not "pro-Russian", are you? |
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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
I think a way of looking at this is, and this is pure opinion/observation on my part is this.
There is a lack of fighting age men volunteering, regardless of supposed support in that demographic. Russia has failed to make any meaningful advances in two years. The line has been held and has been static for some time. If it was the U.K. for example, and France invaded the IoW a decade ago, where many residents considered themselves French anyway…and nothing was done. Then France invaded the New Forest and the South Downs, but it was clear they didn’t have the capacity to advance further, and we didn’t have the capacity to push them back. Would I want to see my son sacrificed for that, would my wife want her husband and children martyred for that? Would Scotland send their sons down for that? The current situation is not an existential threat to Ukraine, a negotiated peace is still there to be won. Putin will be dead in a decade or so. It’s not appeasement. |
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In 5 or so years they'll develop a pretext to move further in and the discussions in the West will be the same as they are now. Do we want to risk Russia using nuclear weapons? Why did we 'provoke' Russia by offering to protect Ukraine? Ukraine has already given up some land for peace in 2024, what's the harm in offering a little bit more? I think in the near term we might enter a frozen conflict though. |
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Russia can’t advance and Ukraine is going nowhere. There will be no push back and to think they can reclaim pre-2014 borders looks fantasy. In any event, if it’s a long game to be played, Russia will prevail. |
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In 5 years or so Ukraine could develop and train a volunteer army. NATO countries could (and should) identify assets that could quickly be transferred, with training of Ukrainians so that this is good to go from day 1. Not F-16s when anyone can be bothered, and not something that can easily be bogged down in a Congressional deadlock. If Ukrainians are paying in blood for a proxy war this is the least they deserve. |
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