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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
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Trump was not in power and did not do the withdrawal. So we have no idea how good or bad it would have been. Biden was in charge and it was a shambles. |
Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
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American and Ukrainian interests were perhaps a happy alignment, but the interests here are fundamentally different than pursuing Islamists or Communists in far-flung corners of the world. The defence and stability of Europe, from which sprang the only two wars ever to get so big and bloody as to be dubbed ‘world war’, has the bedrock of US foreign and defence policy since 1945. Whatever the strengths or weaknesses of the Biden plan, the aim was perfectly aligned with long-term, bilaterally-supported policy of keeping Russia stable and contained in the East, and Europe safe and untroubled with thoughts of massive rearmament in the west. Many of us squealed long and loud about the injustice of giving Ukraine only what it needed to hold on, rather than what it needed to inflict a devastating defeat on Russia (which the US could have done, and would have resulted in a shorter conflict with fewer casualties), but the reasoning behind it is at least understandable in terms of long-term strategy. Trump is emphatically not acting in the spirit of every US administration since 1945 (barring his own, and in 2017-2021 he didn’t go nearly as far as he is now, though he seemed to want to). He is treating Europe, and this conflict, as a cost-centre on his spreadsheet. He has no grand strategic vision and he has no depth of understanding of why the US is so financially committed to NATO and why settling the Ukraine conflict on terms that favour Russia is a strategic mis-step that will inevitably lead to further conflict down the line. This, ultimately, is why you’re misunderstanding what you’re seeing - because you’re incapable of seeing Trump is not behaving like any US president since at least 1945. He is not motivated by any of the statescraft that typically motivates someone who gets as far as the presidency. Sure, you can go on construing this as simply the US losing interest in another foreign conflict as it has many times before, but if you do so you will miss the major strategic changes that are underway across Europe, precisely because this is all happening in Europe, the one part of the world that every major power on earth has long agreed is the last place you want massive military proliferation. When you understand that even Germany is poised to change its debt rules to allow it to re-arm, you know something has changed, and not for the better. This is not special pleading - Europe is different and American policy has long recognised that. Until now. |
Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
Also, the US bases in Europe are not only there as a deterrent/protection for the Countries they are in, they are there to support power projection and minimise the "loss of strength gradient*". As we have seen in the current conflict, soldiers win battles, logistics win wars - by having permanent bases in Europe, many of the benefits that US military forces have operating in the United States are replicated overseas, and the loss of strength gradient starts from Europe, rather than the United States.
Also, the bases in Europe allow the USA to react quicker to hot-spots/issues in the Gulf/Mediterranean/Eastern Europe much faster/more consistently than if they had to ship everything over from 'Murica... * the farther a military is operating from "home", the less power they can project to that area. |
Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
Yes, was just reading this article on the subject
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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
I guess the question is really whether you view Ukraine as economically, politically or in any military sense (NATO membership) Europe as defined in any kind of post-1945 order. Self-evidently the Biden administration did not, hence being willing to sacrifice it on the battlefield in a war of attrition that you’d never see with Brits, Germans or even Turks. Also self-evidently the Trump administration also does not - merely a useful buffer zone between Poland and Russia.
I’m more than happy with my great powers lens. You don’t get the same optics comparing meetings like that between Rubio, Lavrov and their respective delegations around grand tables with anyone else. You get Starmer and his coalition of the willing at school desks arranged like three sides of a square. Europe is being successfully mugged for defence spending by the US. Nothing has actually materially changed in respect of whether there is an actual threat from Russia to the European - EU, NATO, etc. borders. |
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As to whether there is an active threat to NATO from Russia, well, while Trump, whether recklessly or due to some perceived master plan, is making such love to the Russians with his grand promises of getting them the Donbas, Crimea and who knows what else, arguably yes there very much is. I leave you in the capable hands of Mike Martin MP, former squaddie and current member of multiple relevant Parliamentary committees, who has just returned from a fact-finding visit to Estonia. https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1...424157861.html Quote:
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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
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The short story, while an entertaining read, seems to ignore that it’s not the absence of troops or equipment preventing intervention - it’s not having an independent foreign policy from the United States (Article 5 or otherwise). I don’t think there’s anything 4D chess about straightforward extortion. Trump could have picked up the idea from countless TV movies about “the mob”. |
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---------- Post added at 09:28 ---------- Previous post was at 09:16 ---------- I should add by the way that Mike Martin’s ‘short story’ was actually a Xitter thread compiled by a thread-reader app, which may have given the impression that it was presented as a more substantial piece of analysis than it was intended to be. As a threaded series of posts on Twitter it should be taken for what it is - a simple set of observations. His proposal is that we don’t realise how quickly Art.5 could crumble in the current climate and I think his outline scenario demonstrates that. The strategic failings that brought us here aren’t ignored, they’re just part of a different discussion he happens not to have addressed here. |
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