barbos
Contributor
lpetrich,
What should Russia do? return Crimea to Ukraine?
What should Russia do? return Crimea to Ukraine?
Yes.lpetrich,
What should Russia do? return Crimea to Ukraine?
If Ukraine wants closer economic ties with EU, why do you think America is in any position to accept or reject it?You are not engaged in serious discussion here. The record of what has happened in Ukraine is clear enough, and it does not support your absurd claims. Putin has had plenty of opportunities to take Ukraine if he chose to do so. If we would accept a non-aligned Ukraine, there would be no problem whatsoever.
As for military alignment, Ukraine wasn't very keen to join NATO until Russia started annexing parts of it. And even then it's not as if NATO will admit a member that is in active war with its neighbours huge unresolved border issues, and that's partially what Putin is banking on... as long as Putin keeps a frozen conflict in Eastern Ukraine NATO's doors will be shut.
Yes.lpetrich,
What should Russia do? return Crimea to Ukraine?
I'm not desperate to kneel before Putin. I'm desperate to avoid nuclear war. Who appointed us to handle these problems?
We did. We signed an agreement with Ukraine to maintain Ukrainian territorial sovereignty (i.e. stop anyone breaking off pieces) in return for Ukraine giving up it's nuclear missiles. So did Russia. Now Putin is trying to break off pieces. He's already moved Russian troops in, so it only makes sense for NATO to do the same. Abandoning Ukraine is about the strongest argument for nuclear proliferation that you can give.
I think the differences in perspective maybe down to the usual US vagueness about geography. For you, Eastern Europe is far away, unimportant and sort of vaguely full of communists. For us, it's more like Mexico - very close, and most people know someone with family there. You keep saying that Ukraine is vital to Russia's security, but it's a lot more vital to Hungary, Romania and Poland.
And I think you also overestimate the role of the US here. European forces can resist a Russia invasion very easily - they just draw a line and nuke everything that goes past it. They don't need the US for that.
Iran and Iraq fought a war for 10 years. We stayed out of it. (mostly)
Well, apart from supplying one side with weapons, intelligence, supplies, secure trade routes, and diplomatic cover when they started using chemical weapons.
But in this situation we don't face any dilemma at all. Putin has no intention of taking Ukraine unless we provoke him into it. He's perfectly willing to live with a non-aligned Ukraine as he has done since the Soviet Union broke up. We're the ones who don't want a neutral Ukraine.
No, it's the Ukrainians who don't want a neutral Ukraine. That's why they elected a president who promised to align with the west, got rid of him when he tried to deal with Moscow instead, and have now voted in a pro-western coalition, supporting pro-western parties at the expense of the far left and far right. The main driver isn't the US stirring up trouble, it's Poland, a neighbour with a similar history to Ukraine of being conquered or controlled by other countries, who are now doing noticeably better than their eastern neighbours while keeping most of their social safety net, strong trade unions, and traditional industries.
Link??I agree. Until the American-sponsored coup, Ukrainians had no great desire to join NATO. That is not true of the US, however. The US sponsored membership for both Georgia and Ukraine shortly after the "Orange Revolution," (also almost certainly US sponsored), when, after winning the election, Yanukovich was prevented from taking office. Fortunately calmer heads prevailed. NATO then voted to admit Ukraine and Georgia at some unspecified time in the future. So we've been hankering to admit Ukraine to NATO for a long time.
Nonsense, Europe has more than enough nukes to destroy Russia several times over. It doesn't matter that Russia has enough nukes to destroy us a few times more than we can destroy them.
And *of course* the conflict would remain conventional. Russia isn't going to commit that level of suicide over Ukraine. Russia knows that the moment it uses nukes, it ceases to exist.
But this has been my point all along. It really doesn't matter who violated this or who has a right to do that. Our policy runs the risk of provoking a nuclear war. And the NATO troops in Ukraine is really, really, risky. 1300 NATO troops couldn't stop Putin, but they do serve as a trip-wire if they get in the way of Russian forces.
You keep crying about how we're risking a nuclear war. You make it very clear that you think it's *Russia* that'd launch the nukes first. You're afraid of Russia, but at every point you defend their actions. That makes you look like you've got stockholm syndrome. You're like the battered housewife who keeps defending her abuser. "Yes officer, he hit me twenty times in the face and dislocated my jaw... But I was asking for it, it's not his fault!"
We have no significant interests in Ukraine. Our actions there are provocative toward Russia. We're risking EVERYTHING for no significant gain. That's why the policy is absolutely insane.
Nonsense, we most certainly *do* have significant interests in Ukraine, whether you're talking about just Europe or NATO. Furthermore, it really shouldn't matter whether or not we have significant interests there or not. This whole mess started because Europe offered Ukraine a peaceful trade deal; nothing more. Russia didn't like this, and started pressuring their puppet president into rejecting the deal even though he was elected in large part because he promised to bring Ukraine closer to Europe. That is the sole reason why the Ukrainians rose up against him, not because we sponsored some coup but because a corrupt president broke his campaign promises.
Under absolutely no circumstances was it at all justified for Russia to respond the way it did; nor should we, meaning the rest of the world, stand by and let a country be beaten up by an autocratic neighbor for the sole crime of wanting to make a trade deal with someone else. Even if our only interest was international law and order, we'd have a more than *significant* interest in the situation in Ukraine.
But you, battered and afraid housewife that you appear to be, would rather run away screaming because Russia might hit you again.
Link??I agree. Until the American-sponsored coup, Ukrainians had no great desire to join NATO. That is not true of the US, however. The US sponsored membership for both Georgia and Ukraine shortly after the "Orange Revolution," (also almost certainly US sponsored), when, after winning the election, Yanukovich was prevented from taking office. Fortunately calmer heads prevailed. NATO then voted to admit Ukraine and Georgia at some unspecified time in the future. So we've been hankering to admit Ukraine to NATO for a long time.
No, it's the Ukrainians who don't want a neutral Ukraine. That's why they elected a president who promised to align with the west, got rid of him when he tried to deal with Moscow instead, and have now voted in a pro-western coalition, supporting pro-western parties at the expense of the far left and far right. The main driver isn't the US stirring up trouble, it's Poland, a neighbour with a similar history to Ukraine of being conquered or controlled by other countries, who are now doing noticeably better than their eastern neighbours while keeping most of their social safety net, strong trade unions, and traditional industries.
First of all, Putin did not invade Ukraine. He is maintaining troops in Crimea, but not in Ukraine.
Yanukovich was elected under internationally supervised elections.
Poroshenko was elected by Western Ukrainians under occupation by armed neo-Nazi's, Right Sector ultra-nationalists and Ukrainian troops.
But those issues are secondary.
An agreement with the opposition leaders wasn't reached until people started dying on the streets, and at that point things were too far along to appease the protestors. What dystopian was referring to was what got the ball rolling in the first place, which was Yanukovich refusing to sign the EU association agreement despite his campaign promises.Nonsense, Europe has more than enough nukes to destroy Russia several times over. It doesn't matter that Russia has enough nukes to destroy us a few times more than we can destroy them.
And *of course* the conflict would remain conventional. Russia isn't going to commit that level of suicide over Ukraine. Russia knows that the moment it uses nukes, it ceases to exist.
You keep crying about how we're risking a nuclear war. You make it very clear that you think it's *Russia* that'd launch the nukes first. You're afraid of Russia, but at every point you defend their actions. That makes you look like you've got stockholm syndrome. You're like the battered housewife who keeps defending her abuser. "Yes officer, he hit me twenty times in the face and dislocated my jaw... But I was asking for it, it's not his fault!"
We have no significant interests in Ukraine. Our actions there are provocative toward Russia. We're risking EVERYTHING for no significant gain. That's why the policy is absolutely insane.
Nonsense, we most certainly *do* have significant interests in Ukraine, whether you're talking about just Europe or NATO. Furthermore, it really shouldn't matter whether or not we have significant interests there or not. This whole mess started because Europe offered Ukraine a peaceful trade deal; nothing more. Russia didn't like this, and started pressuring their puppet president into rejecting the deal even though he was elected in large part because he promised to bring Ukraine closer to Europe. That is the sole reason why the Ukrainians rose up against him, not because we sponsored some coup but because a corrupt president broke his campaign promises.
Under absolutely no circumstances was it at all justified for Russia to respond the way it did; nor should we, meaning the rest of the world, stand by and let a country be beaten up by an autocratic neighbor for the sole crime of wanting to make a trade deal with someone else. Even if our only interest was international law and order, we'd have a more than *significant* interest in the situation in Ukraine.
But you, battered and afraid housewife that you appear to be, would rather run away screaming because Russia might hit you again.
I'm not going to deal with your repetition of State Department propaganda. We've been over that many times before. You're story just doesn't hold up. An agreement with the protestors had been reached prior to the coup, a point which you consistently ignore.
First of all, Putin did not invade Ukraine. He is maintaining troops in Crimea, but not in Ukraine.
And any movement of those troops in Crimea outside of the terms of maintainace agreement, such as attacking the Ukrainian army, is still an invasion.
Yanukovich was elected under internationally supervised elections.
All the elections have been internationally supervised, both Parliamentary and presidential. The only exception is the 'referendum' Russian troops ran in Crimea.
Poroshenko was elected by Western Ukrainians under occupation by armed neo-Nazi's, Right Sector ultra-nationalists and Ukrainian troops.
How can you treat this claim as a reason to ignore the result, when the Crimean election you're hoilding up as legitmate was organised by the Russia army?
But those issues are secondary.
No, actually, invading another country and annexing parts of it is about as primary as you can get.
Link??I agree. Until the American-sponsored coup, Ukrainians had no great desire to join NATO. That is not true of the US, however. The US sponsored membership for both Georgia and Ukraine shortly after the "Orange Revolution," (also almost certainly US sponsored), when, after winning the election, Yanukovich was prevented from taking office. Fortunately calmer heads prevailed. NATO then voted to admit Ukraine and Georgia at some unspecified time in the future. So we've been hankering to admit Ukraine to NATO for a long time.
An agreement with the opposition leaders wasn't reached until people started dying on the streets, and at that point things were too far along to appease the protestors. What dystopian was referring to was what got the ball rolling in the first place, which was Yanukovich refusing to sign the EU association agreement despite his campaign promises.Nonsense, Europe has more than enough nukes to destroy Russia several times over. It doesn't matter that Russia has enough nukes to destroy us a few times more than we can destroy them.
And *of course* the conflict would remain conventional. Russia isn't going to commit that level of suicide over Ukraine. Russia knows that the moment it uses nukes, it ceases to exist.
You keep crying about how we're risking a nuclear war. You make it very clear that you think it's *Russia* that'd launch the nukes first. You're afraid of Russia, but at every point you defend their actions. That makes you look like you've got stockholm syndrome. You're like the battered housewife who keeps defending her abuser. "Yes officer, he hit me twenty times in the face and dislocated my jaw... But I was asking for it, it's not his fault!"
We have no significant interests in Ukraine. Our actions there are provocative toward Russia. We're risking EVERYTHING for no significant gain. That's why the policy is absolutely insane.
Nonsense, we most certainly *do* have significant interests in Ukraine, whether you're talking about just Europe or NATO. Furthermore, it really shouldn't matter whether or not we have significant interests there or not. This whole mess started because Europe offered Ukraine a peaceful trade deal; nothing more. Russia didn't like this, and started pressuring their puppet president into rejecting the deal even though he was elected in large part because he promised to bring Ukraine closer to Europe. That is the sole reason why the Ukrainians rose up against him, not because we sponsored some coup but because a corrupt president broke his campaign promises.
Under absolutely no circumstances was it at all justified for Russia to respond the way it did; nor should we, meaning the rest of the world, stand by and let a country be beaten up by an autocratic neighbor for the sole crime of wanting to make a trade deal with someone else. Even if our only interest was international law and order, we'd have a more than *significant* interest in the situation in Ukraine.
But you, battered and afraid housewife that you appear to be, would rather run away screaming because Russia might hit you again.
I'm not going to deal with your repetition of State Department propaganda. We've been over that many times before. You're story just doesn't hold up. An agreement with the protestors had been reached prior to the coup, a point which you consistently ignore.
If a president gets elected on a platform that he'll bring the country closer to EU, and then being ousted by public protest because he breaks that promise, isn't as undemocratic as you make it out to be.
You could easily have looked these up yourself. If you want to discuss the issue, you should inform yourself beforehand.
And any movement of those troops in Crimea outside of the terms of maintainace agreement, such as attacking the Ukrainian army, is still an invasion.
Yanukovich was elected under internationally supervised elections.
All the elections have been internationally supervised, both Parliamentary and presidential. The only exception is the 'referendum' Russian troops ran in Crimea.
Poroshenko was elected by Western Ukrainians under occupation by armed neo-Nazi's, Right Sector ultra-nationalists and Ukrainian troops.
How can you treat this claim as a reason to ignore the result, when the Crimean election you're hoilding up as legitmate was organised by the Russia army?
But those issues are secondary.
No, actually, invading another country and annexing parts of it is about as primary as you can get.
Putin did not attack Ukrainian troops. Elections were not internationally supervised at the time of the Orange Revolution although there were foreign observers. I haven't claimed that the Crimean election was proper. I don't know. I have no basis for judging that. I would say that nuclear war is a lot more serious issue. That's why Ike didn't go into Hungary. That's why LBJ didn't go into Czechoslovakia. For all their faults, they were of sound mind. I don't have such confidence in our current policy makers.
You could easily have looked these up yourself. If you want to discuss the issue, you should inform yourself beforehand.
If you're going to assert that America was responsible for the "coup," perhaps you should provide sources that actually say this, instead of sources that merely indicate that NATO was favorable to a more friendly Ukrainian government.
If that is your standard for what constitutes a "coup," then Russia is certainly guilty of sponsoring a coup in Crimea.
Putin did not attack Ukrainian troops.
Victoria Nuland, by the way, is married to Robert Kagan a well-known neo-con whose brother, Frederick came up with the "surge" plan for Iraq. So those neo-cons who got Bush to lie us into war in Iraq and still busy running the show under Obama.
The point is not whether Yanukovich was overthrown with via normal democratic process. It's that the protests weren't some conspiracy orchestrated by the US, but a movement that was sparked by Yanukovich kowtowing to Russia by betraying his campaign promises. If Yanukovich had run on an anti-EU, pro-secessionist platform, do you think that he would ever have been elected in the first place?An agreement with the opposition leaders wasn't reached until people started dying on the streets, and at that point things were too far along to appease the protestors. What dystopian was referring to was what got the ball rolling in the first place, which was Yanukovich refusing to sign the EU association agreement despite his campaign promises.Nonsense, Europe has more than enough nukes to destroy Russia several times over. It doesn't matter that Russia has enough nukes to destroy us a few times more than we can destroy them.
And *of course* the conflict would remain conventional. Russia isn't going to commit that level of suicide over Ukraine. Russia knows that the moment it uses nukes, it ceases to exist.
You keep crying about how we're risking a nuclear war. You make it very clear that you think it's *Russia* that'd launch the nukes first. You're afraid of Russia, but at every point you defend their actions. That makes you look like you've got stockholm syndrome. You're like the battered housewife who keeps defending her abuser. "Yes officer, he hit me twenty times in the face and dislocated my jaw... But I was asking for it, it's not his fault!"
We have no significant interests in Ukraine. Our actions there are provocative toward Russia. We're risking EVERYTHING for no significant gain. That's why the policy is absolutely insane.
Nonsense, we most certainly *do* have significant interests in Ukraine, whether you're talking about just Europe or NATO. Furthermore, it really shouldn't matter whether or not we have significant interests there or not. This whole mess started because Europe offered Ukraine a peaceful trade deal; nothing more. Russia didn't like this, and started pressuring their puppet president into rejecting the deal even though he was elected in large part because he promised to bring Ukraine closer to Europe. That is the sole reason why the Ukrainians rose up against him, not because we sponsored some coup but because a corrupt president broke his campaign promises.
Under absolutely no circumstances was it at all justified for Russia to respond the way it did; nor should we, meaning the rest of the world, stand by and let a country be beaten up by an autocratic neighbor for the sole crime of wanting to make a trade deal with someone else. Even if our only interest was international law and order, we'd have a more than *significant* interest in the situation in Ukraine.
But you, battered and afraid housewife that you appear to be, would rather run away screaming because Russia might hit you again.
I'm not going to deal with your repetition of State Department propaganda. We've been over that many times before. You're story just doesn't hold up. An agreement with the protestors had been reached prior to the coup, a point which you consistently ignore.
If a president gets elected on a platform that he'll bring the country closer to EU, and then being ousted by public protest because he breaks that promise, isn't as undemocratic as you make it out to be.
Certainly it's not a democratic process. If it were, Obama would have been run out of town on a rail. "If you like your health care plan you can keep it." "I'll withdraw our troops from Iraq in 16 months. You can take that to the bank." "All US troops will be out of Afghanistan by the end of 2014." Not that Obama is alone in failing to keep campaign promises. Since when did that ever justify an armed insurrection? You, yourself, can only claim that it's not "as undemocratic as you make it out to be." Which means, of course, that it IS undemocratic by your own admission.