Derec
Contributor
Yea, I reluctantly agree with Jay. We can't risk WW3.
Yea, I reluctantly agree with Jay. We can't risk WW3.
Majority of Americans were against joining WW2 even after France and Britain had declared war, even when the latter was already occupied. Can't blame that on Chamberlain.Yea, I reluctantly agree with Jay. We can't risk WW3.
the only reason the Ukranians are still fighting is because they expect western aid at some point. When that hope dies I think Ukranian defences will melt away
Why will that hope die? The munitions industry will keep it alive.
I don't know what the Russian people think of Putin. They're a funny (funny weird, not funny ha-ha) lot.Don't you think he'd be as revered and honoured as Saddam was? The Iraqis loved him up until his secret police folded. Then suddenly all that love evaporated in an instant.
If you think Ws invasion of Iraq was shining success story that should be emulated, then that's why I compared your attitude to Leroy Jenkins.Don't you think he'd be as revered and honoured as Saddam was? The Iraqis loved him up until his secret police folded. Then suddenly all that love evaporated in an instant.
You haven't specified if it should be a NATO invasion or EU-led invasion
You haven't specified the size and type of military equipment involved
You haven't specified which countries next to Russia would be fine with a mobilization within their borders
You haven't specified what talks, if any, between Moldova, Belarus and Hungary and the imaginary coalition army of yours would entail
You haven't specified what sort of transitional government would take place in the very unlikely chance Putin is taken out by Western forces (FYI, this is the big point)
You haven't specified what the type of "lost coms" procedure would be used in this coalition army you imagined to prevent a metric fuckload of blue on green happening
You haven't specified how each and every nation involved in this fantasy of yours would authorise an act on war via their government to their citizens
You haven't specified any involvement of the UN, the Security council in particular
You haven't specified the obvious reaction from China
You've ignored a lot of things, decided "fuck it, we'll figure it out on the fly because Hitler" and consider that to be a good idea. It's downright moronic. I don't think you have a fucking clue how difficult it is to have armies from only two countries working together. Let alone this, what twenty?, you've conjured up in this fantasy.
Majority of Americans were against joining WW2 even after France and Britain had declared war, even when the latter was already occupied. Can't blame that on Chamberlain.Yea, I reluctantly agree with Jay. We can't risk WW3.
The biggest handicap the west has now is also the public opinion. In a democracy, politicians can't go against the public for long, and if the public is more interested in price of gas or haggling about identity politics, what are you going to do? That's also what Putin is counting on.
Ah. You are a student of the Cathy Newman technique. Great.Bad idea. Nothing rallies the plebs to a nation's leader than a threat by an external force. As far as most Russians are concerned Ukraine is rightfully an integral part of Russia. It's called the rally 'round the flag effect.
So we should not have kicked out Hitler out of parts of Europe he occupied (most of it)? You know, because of the fear Germans might rally behind him if we do.
There are limits to what we can learn from history. A direct military confrontation between Russia and NATO members will not avoid another world war. It will make it much more likely. WWIII will be nothing like WWII.Majority of Americans were against joining WW2 even after France and Britain had declared war, even when the latter was already occupied. Can't blame that on Chamberlain.Yea, I reluctantly agree with Jay. We can't risk WW3.
The biggest handicap the west has now is also the public opinion. In a democracy, politicians can't go against the public for long, and if the public is more interested in price of gas or haggling about identity politics, what are you going to do? That's also what Putin is counting on.
Perhaps we can learn from history?
I'm curious, under what charter in the NATO treaty would you engage to initiate a NATO attack on Russian soldiers in Ukraine?Yea, I reluctantly agree with Jay. We can't risk WW3.
Ah. You are a student of the Cathy Newman technique. Great.Bad idea. Nothing rallies the plebs to a nation's leader than a threat by an external force. As far as most Russians are concerned Ukraine is rightfully an integral part of Russia. It's called the rally 'round the flag effect.
So we should not have kicked out Hitler out of parts of Europe he occupied (most of it)? You know, because of the fear Germans might rally behind him if we do.
There is more than one way to skin a cat. The Russians were driven out of Afghanistan without direct confrontations between NATO and Soviet forces. What happened instead was the arming of the mujahideen at a cost of between 6 and 12 billion dollars. Supplying them with about 2300 FIM-92 Stinger surface-to-air missiles was probably the greatest factor in forcing the Russian military out of the country between 1987 and 1989. It also was a major contributing factor in the economic and political collapse of the Soviet empire.
$6–12 billion is a lot of money, but it is a lot less than the human and material cost that would result in a direct military confrontation between Russia and NATO members.
There are limits to what we can learn from history. A direct military confrontation between Russia and NATO members will not avoid another world war. It will make it much more likely. WWIII will be nothing like WWII.Majority of Americans were against joining WW2 even after France and Britain had declared war, even when the latter was already occupied. Can't blame that on Chamberlain.Yea, I reluctantly agree with Jay. We can't risk WW3.
The biggest handicap the west has now is also the public opinion. In a democracy, politicians can't go against the public for long, and if the public is more interested in price of gas or haggling about identity politics, what are you going to do? That's also what Putin is counting on.
Perhaps we can learn from history?
And yet you are still frustrated as to why things aren't operating to your specific timetable. What is happening now is a million times better than the asinine good guys vs bad guy crap you articulated in your initial post. So fuck your idea. It is stupid.Because it's not my job to figure this out?
Meh. Who cares? NATO consists of 28 member nations, but is basically the USA, whose contribution amounts to 70.5% of the organisation's total funding. The second-biggest contributor is the UK with 5.4%.It would also split NATO. Article 5 does not say that an attack close to one member's border is an attack on all members. Some NATO members would not join in an aggressive attack outside the NATO borders.
Time for the non-US members of NATO to do moreMeh. Who cares? NATO consists of 28 member nations, but is basically the USA, whose contribution amounts to 70.5% of the organisation's total funding. The second-biggest contributor is the UK with 5.4%.It would also split NATO. Article 5 does not say that an attack close to one member's border is an attack on all members. Some NATO members would not join in an aggressive attack outside the NATO borders.
So ... no. Ukraine will be getting their guns from 30 NATO member States, and if there is consensus that Russia needs to be "outgunned", they will be. Meanwhile, the more guns Russia has, the better for the US and Western European "defense" industries.the only reason the Ukranians are still fighting is because they expect western aid at some point. When that hope dies I think Ukranian defences will melt away
Why will that hope die? The munitions industry will keep it alive.
It's simply a question of numbers. Russia outguns the Ukraine on every metric. You know, the one reason the Allies beat the Axis in WW2 despite the Axis initial successes.
Yes, but that's not germane to the context of this thread.Time for the non-US members of NATO to do more
So what's your point? That the defense industry will keep the conflict going by lobbying to send weapons to Ukraine, or that they will keep the conflict going by lobbying not to send enough weapons to Ukraine?So ... no. Ukraine will be getting their guns from 30 NATO member States, and if there is consensus that Russia needs to be "outgunned", they will be. Meanwhile, the more guns Russia has, the better for the US and Western European "defense" industries.the only reason the Ukranians are still fighting is because they expect western aid at some point. When that hope dies I think Ukranian defences will melt away
Why will that hope die? The munitions industry will keep it alive.
It's simply a question of numbers. Russia outguns the Ukraine on every metric. You know, the one reason the Allies beat the Axis in WW2 despite the Axis initial successes.
Wait, didn't Trump say that?Time for the non-US members of NATO to do moreMeh. Who cares? NATO consists of 28 member nations, but is basically the USA, whose contribution amounts to 70.5% of the organisation's total funding. The second-biggest contributor is the UK with 5.4%.It would also split NATO. Article 5 does not say that an attack close to one member's border is an attack on all members. Some NATO members would not join in an aggressive attack outside the NATO borders.
Yes he did. He was wrong also. I could try to educate you on the difference between NATO countries spend in portion of their GDP and the US investing in soft power (hint; NATO could lose half of US funding and still be as effective as this time last week), but you seem to think your country's gas prices are determined by some bloke named Brandon so that's an asinine uphill battle I choose to avoid.Wait, didn't Trump say that?
It’s the former, and I agree. Not a problem, just a feature of an unfortunate landscape.So what's your point? That the defense industry will keep the conflict going by lobbying to send weapons to Ukraine, or that they will keep the conflict going by lobbying not to send enough weapons to Ukraine?So ... no. Ukraine will be getting their guns from 30 NATO member States, and if there is consensus that Russia needs to be "outgunned", they will be. Meanwhile, the more guns Russia has, the better for the US and Western European "defense" industries.the only reason the Ukranians are still fighting is because they expect western aid at some point. When that hope dies I think Ukranian defences will melt away
Why will that hope die? The munitions industry will keep it alive.
It's simply a question of numbers. Russia outguns the Ukraine on every metric. You know, the one reason the Allies beat the Axis in WW2 despite the Axis initial successes.
If the former, I don't see a problem. In this case the interests of the military-industrial complex align with what's right. Weapons used for self-defense against an aggressor are fine by me. Even if Ukraine loses, building up deterrent to prevent or delay the next war is worth it.
Taking out the SAM sites would require a pretty major operation against Russia to take down the entire defense network over a large area. You don't just go take out one SAM site independent of the rest.Part of the message delivered to Russia would be an explicit warning that ANYTHING which enters Ukrainian airspace would elicit a response. Fire a SAM? That site no longer exists. Is that an escalation? Yes. Is it a threat? Yes. Yet Putin has threatened escalation since day one. The threat of escalation is part of his strategy. Yet again, Putin knows his limits. Would he be stupid enough to launch a weapon against a NATO aircraft, knowing the response would be immediate and overwhelming?