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Further to that wise post.....
If we're going to look at history, we have to look at ALL of the history. Ukraine also has a shared history with the Kazakhs, the Chechens, the Lithuanians, the Poles, and the Ottomans, each of whom ruled all or part of modern Ukraine. And for that matter, Ukraine once ruled parts of what is now Russia, including Moscow proper. So we must resist cherry picking to facilitate the expediency of easy things (in this case, quitting).
Part of the liberal order is the principle of self-determination. People do get a say in social contract. They are not morally obligated to seek the nearest greatest power and swear fealty. And the Ukrainians have made an unequivocal statement that they wish to be independent, part of Europe rather than Russia. And neither international law nor the liberal order, nor any sense of common decency gives a more powerful neighbor the right to invade and subjugate at will.
All of that falls within the context of existing geopolitical realities. Ukraine is in the shatterzone between a large and mighty Europe....and a smaller, weaker, poorer Russia. The European Polity has institutions, notably EU and Nato. In such a situation, "balance" is an independent, neutral Ukraine and Belarus. Russia has already returned Belarus to Russian orbit. Russia has now invaded Ukraine to return Ukraine to Russian orbit. And Russia has plainly stated an intention to break EU and its institutions in order to forcibly return several European states to the Russian orbit.
So, with respect to all the otherwise well-reasoned efforts by learned hands here.....the war they seek to avoid has already started. Do not mistake this first battle as a limited conflict, resolution of which will end all risks of future conflicts. Quite the opposite. Russia is going to go thru Ukraine in order to break Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland out of NATO, at minimum. It is good strategy to fight to defend those states not on their soil but in Ukraine. Ukraine IS the shatterzone, after all. And as long as the Ukrainians are willing to fight and die for their country (and that they are resolute in their conviction to do so cannot be questioned), we should ensure they are able to resist, and certainly do not fail for lack of ammunition.
Russia is weak. Stop them now, or they add Ukrainian resources to their larder. They'll be back in a decade much stronger than they are today.
If, if, if......we are where we are. And that is in a war that we can and should win, as long as we do not talk ourselves out of doing smart things.
This is self-serving, mostly false propaganda having little or nothing to do with our real aims and policies. The idea that we're defending any principle of self-determination is a sick joke.
Whiterock makes some real points that are valid, but I'll agree with you at this level. Russia is the target, not Ukraine. As soon as more people realize this, the more the game makes sense. We may get a 2 for 1 with China after they're stuck with worthless rubles and sovereign debt, not to mention the wounding of a world competitor in the energy space. Everyone may not like the game, but there's a reason we are the world's only super power and not watching China or Russia go barbarian horde over Southern and SE Asia. Some of you griping about inflation now would be shocked what would happen if the US lost its primary currency position.
The Afghani's were the last ones to help us bleed out the Russians, and assisted in quickening the demise of the Soviet Union. I have no desire for boots on the ground or pilots in the sky, but this is a bargain approach compared to the future with an emboldened Russia with territorial expansion partnered with China. The small war versus the giant war.
But Russia started the Ukraine situation well before 2014. That's indisputable.
Understand. What is our next step if Russia uses a tactical, battlefield nuclear weapon?
It's a straw man to think there is a bifurcated choice between starting World War III and the U.S. losing global supremacy. The line had been drawn since World War II, and it was not at the Ukrainian-Russian border.
Most of the "anti" arguments would hold a lot more water if US boys & girls (and I have 1 of each in uniform…..) were engaged in the fighting. But they're not. Because Ukrainian boys & girls are. That's a position with maintaining.
What if this position can't be maintained?
I know everyone thinks Russia is losing, but is that 100% factual?
Doubt it's 100% factual.
Suspect much of such chatter is merely wishful thinking bouncing among like minded 'news' organizations with 'authenticity' growing with each repeat .
It was 100%. That's why Russia mobilized. That might reverse the situation, assuming they can get everyone armed & deployed in a reasonable timeframe. But that'll take 60 more days. until then, UKR will have initiative.
There is no threshold here about NATO supporting UKR. We went they that six months ago. We've emptied out warehouses of all gear old, obsolete, or Soviet. Now we're supplying big fires and sophisticated systems like HIMARS that are having decisive battlefield effect.
Russia escalates, we escalate (by providing weapons systems) in a way that makes the Russian position worse. They escalate again, we go a half step further.
The message to Putin is:
Yes Russia is big and mean.
We are bigger and meaner.
Don't play the escalation game with us.
The last round of that game turns your country into a parking lot.
Your only win is to sue for terms that allow you to go home and keep your navy.
Russia has begun evacuating citizens from Kherson…..
Perfect
After we 'turn their country into a parking lot' undoubtedly the Russians will just whimper off to die without launching their nukes from their mobile ground units or dozens of nuclear submarines.
And if they do…so what ?
We will just hit 'replay' on the video game.
Oh wait ……
Canada
What is your solution? At what point does it become a US problem? What point is does it impact us enough to help an invaded Nation defend itself?
Bingo. The weak underbelly of Canada's position, and that of most of the more vocal power geopolitics school theoreticians who are so critical of our current Ukraine policy, is that it implicitly presumes that Ukraine is for Russia to dispose of as it sees fit. Once we accept the premise that Russia has the right to dominate the shatterzones around it, then there is no competition.....they just drive their tanks up to our border with the shatterzone and start revving engines every time they want something.
If Russia ends up owning the shatterzone, fine. We'll deal with it. But you do not just let them have it for nothing. Make them pay for it. Dearly. Make them take centuries to do it. And the time between then and now is called "peace." It's a time when their kids and our kids are not looking at one another eyeball to eyeball across fields of razor wire. That's the way the power geopolitics game is actually played. It is a "Great Game" and it goes on forever. The only question is on which squares it is played.
Right now, we're playing it on the Ukrainian square, with Ukranian troops, who are begging and pleading for more ammo. Piss-poor gamesmanship not to send them most of what they ask for.
We're not trying to collapse Russia.
We're trying to get Russia to stop.
or pay dearly to keep going.
And if Russia does collapse....
If the Russian Federation as we know it does collapse....
Ukraine's 55m people become the beating heart of the Eastern Slavic world.
That would be a history-changer.
To our benefit.
For a century or three.
Think, boys.
THINK!