Yup. Germany should treat us a bit nicer...Redbrickbear said:Why would Poland not want US troops? Just for the cash they bring alone.RMF5630 said:We have never stationed them in former WP, true. But, this Ukraine move is changing that thinking. Antagonize Russia? THey are invading. Poland is screaming for NATO troops, even saying if Germany doesn't want them they will take them! They wanted our Heavy's that Obama and Trump pulled out. Russia threatens a NATO nation, all bets are off.whiterock said:Your analysis is sound up to the day Romania sees 60k Russian troops stationed in Odessa and Nato STILL refusing to station troops in Romania. (I mean, we've never stationed permanently any NATO troops in the former WP countries, in deference to Russia, to not antagonize Russia. Do we really think those same NATO members who've thought that way thus far are going to decide NOW to forward deploy troops to those countries? ) The failure to do so thus far is a statement. The failure to do that now or in the future also makes a statement. Neither statement will inspire confidence in Romania that they can count on Nato to prevent the conflict from starting. And remember the true lesson of the Russo-Ukrainian war = the cost of victory against Russia exceeds the capability of any of the former WP nations to bear alone.Redbrickbear said:Romania is on the Euro and deeply integrated with the EU. They also see Ukraine and want nothing to do with Russia.whiterock said:yes, but....Sam Lowry said:Sure, but we're talking about two different things now. We can defend Romania if we have to. That doesn't mean our policy needs to revolve around keeping Romania in NATO. It's not as if they bring much to the table in terms of strengthening the alliance. Strategically they're one of its weakest points, along with the Baltic states.whiterock said:that is a very fair point.Sam Lowry said:This is why countries like Romania never should have joined NATO. The dilemma you describe is a predictable result of the policies you advocate.whiterock said:How can you possibly ignore that? Beyond the patent weak-man argument of the remaining post, to suggest that we cannot make sound assessments, given Russian intentions and capabilities and MO, shows profound lack of understanding of history and foreign affairs.Redbrickbear said:Come on...you can not possibly know that.whiterock said:The peace argument for this war is quite weaker than most.Oldbear83 said:whiterock said:You also won't identify how letting Russia annex all/part of Ukraine is preferable to the current situation.Oldbear83 said:
I won't abandon Sanity.
I won't lie to sell my position.
I won't ignore the deaths of innocents in the name of politics.
Some here have done so, it appears.
Since I oppose Putin's invasion, of course I do not consider that acceptable. Have you ignored all my prior posts?
Putin's policy is quite clear, consistent, in both statement and deed. He is going to keep coming westward, with columns armored and fifth, until the Baltics, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania are no longer members in Nato. The only question is time...
Not to mention any invasion, attack, aggression against any NATO state means war with the USA-UK-France-Germany.
Russia of course would be wiped out in such a war.
There is no rational world were we see Russian troop watering their horses in the Danube river.
This statement of "we must stop Russia in Donbas (where the people are ethnic Russians) before they reach Poland or Hungary" is just classic pro-war propaganda.
Hungary (long under the Soviet boot) is the lone voice of peace out there in Europe right now. They are not afraid that Russia is going to come for them next.
If the Hungarians are not afraid why should beltway boomers in D.C. be afraid?
If anything this war against Ukraine as given NATO a new lease on life.
Here's a scenario: Ukraine falls. Russia annexes everything east of the Dnieper, and the Ukrainian coast all the way to the Romanian and Moldovan borders. That was the manifest intent of their invasion. If/when that happens, the implications are:
1) Russia now has a supply chain to Transnistria, where a Donbas-type insurgency is underway as we argue. The ability to directly supply the Russian separatists by land means Russia effectively owns Moldova, given the relative size of Transnistria to the Moldovan state. Moldova cannot stop Russia. It immediately becomes a Russian puppet state, unless the West responds with support for the existing government, creating exactly the same dynamic as developed in Ukraine 2010-2022. How far will it go? What are you going to do? Are you going to let it happen? How does another Russian puppet state further US policy interests?
2) The rump Ukrainian state would remain - Lvov and Kiev. What is your policy? Do we just back off and let it go the way of Belarus? Or do we replay the same game we've played in Ukraine since 2014, only with a sharply weaker hand? Why on earth would we chose that option when we have a better one today?
3) Russian armies are currently encamped on 4 Nato borders (Poland, Baltics). If the Ukrainian rump state becomes Belarus 2.0, that number rises to 7. Each one of those seven states are functioning participatory democracies. How will Russian armies on their border impact politics? Will it stiffen their resolve (ala Poland), or will it weaken it (Hungary). For sure, it will not have "no effect." Will Russian efforts to influence their elections be enhanced by their control over Ukraine and Modlova?
4) In democracies, the pendulum swings. Current regimes will be replaced. Usually, that will be by parties with different ideas. How long before we see a party with softly or harshly anti-Nato or even pro-Russian policies swing to power? Wouldn't that increase the possibility of another Maidan crisis? For sure it increases the number of countries in which such could happen to 7 instead of 3.
5) So, you are SecState. All of the above has happened. (the course is certain, if we lose in Ukraine, only the timeline is in question). One odd morning before coffee, you get the phone call from your COS that the Romanian Army has just surrounded key government buildings in Bucharest. Some general you don't remember meeting is making an announcement that new elections will be held in 90 days. What do you do?
The answer is: the very first thing you do is kick yourself in the ass for a few minutes for not stopping Russia in the Donbas.
Because, now, you have to worry about that general announcing a withdrawal from Nato. You have to worry about Russia effectively controlling elections held by the Romanan military, almost certainly electing a pro-Russian government that will announce a withdrawal from Nato. What do you do when each of those things happen? Complicating things, there will likely be an exiled Romanian regime encamped somewhere demanding Article 5 protections. (serious implications follow). Do we invade a Nato member to restore an exiled regime? Remember, how you respond will be watched with somewhat more than passing interest in Budapest, Warsaw, Bratislava, Tallin, Riga, and Vilnius. We would have no proxy to fight for us. it's a Manichean option - we either let it happen, and deal with the consequences (sharply weaked Nato) or we commit my daughter and a hundred thousand or so more sons & daughters back into the fray. All because you won the argument that we had no business helping Ukraine.
Everything I've posted is plainly known/seen to anyone with a basic knowledge of "the area" and "the business." EVERYTHING Putin has said and done for 25 years has been dedicated to that goal....the goal of getting all the former WP nations out of Nato. The main reason we haven't stopped him yet? The argument of ripeness: Oh, Russia is paper tiger. Look how hard they had to work to subdue Gozny, they said. The faulty premise with that line of reasoning is that the Russian battle plan illustrates weakness. In fact, it's the opposite. Such a plan is just the Russian MO. "We will take what we want and we don't care how many people we kill on either side, how many lives we destroy on either side, how much economic destruction we inflict on either side. If we want it, we want it worse than you and we will happily outbleed you, no matter how long it takes." That reasoning sounds hollow. Unless Russia is your neighbor.
We know that Russia ideologically rejects classical liberalism and democracy, seeing them as threats to the Russian way of life. We know Putin has repeatedly stated about return of Russian hegemony over the entire USSR footprint. Look what he's actually done about it. Consistently. A predictable as sunshine in the morning. How on earth could anyone possibly think Ukraine will satisfy them?
As long as there is a single Ukrainian willing to die for his country, we should make sure he/she never fails for lack of arms & ammo. Every day of battle degrades the Russian war machine. Every day of battle pushes out into the future the time it will take Russia to rebuild. It is borderline madness to cut off the military supply lines to Ukraine, when the consequences are uniformly negative, short and long term, to US interests and actually significantly increase the prospects of escalation.
Your policy on Ukraine is well beyond undesirable.
Unfortunately, the question is "asked & answered." The decision has been made. We have a treaty obligation to defend Romania. We can't say "oh well, we shouldn't have done that in the first place." We have to honor the obligation or.....dare I say it....we confirm Zelenskyy's press conference comments about American credibility. We balk, all of Nato is a paper tiger.
A) have we ever had a departure from Nato?
and
B) how that departure happens is a very important thing.
and
C) any departure is a loss for the alliance. A Russian client state in Romania opens up the slavic parts of the Balkans to Donbas/Transnistria type nonense, which proliferates problems for all the remaining members.
and
D) see above about avoiding all that by just winning the damned proxy war we're in right now.
There is no upside to not winning.......
They are not going anywhere.
In fact they want more NATO troops in country....for both protection and for the money service members spend.
https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/romania-wants-increased-nato-and-us-presence-on-its-territory/
Little Ireland (5 million pop.) contributes more to the EU economy than all of Romania (pop. 19 million)
https://www.statista.com/statistics/316691/eu-budget-contributions-by-country/
They are a free rider on both the EU and NATO...and they are smart enough to realize they have a very good thing going.
The moment the Russians garrison troops and ships in Odessa, Romanian options are not longer solely about what they want to do. They now have to counterbalance every decision against how Moscow will react. Being intransigently pro-Nato has risks, for the country and for each politician. The pro-Nato leaders will, best case, go to the gulag when Russia restores hegemony.
This is why Russia wants to gain Ukraine back. It wants to increase its leverage in formerly controlled lands. Every mile its armies moves closer, that leverage increases.
How does allowing Russian influence in Romana to expand augur the to benefit of US interests?
The Nation I worry about leaving is Turkey, they have never been a fit.
US and NATO interests is for Russia to stay out of Ukraine. I think those worrying about the North (Finland, Sweden and Baltics) are wrong. Russia will go South to the Black Sea where it has more support from Georgia, Chechnya and even Iran, further from NATO's heart. If they start going into Romania, Moldova, and Bulgaria it will put pressure on Turkey and move the battle from NATO's strengths...
How many billions do we put into the Germany economy every year from our military bases and personnel? We can't even guess how much we have spent there since 1945.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_Army_installations_in_Germany
We still have at least 40,000 troops there in 40 major bases. And at one point we had 220 other bases during the cold war.
In terms of investment, infrastructure, payouts, contracts with local business, spending by service members in the local area....it has to be in the many many billions a year.
I am sure the German government knows the exact dollar figure because they are not interested in seeing the US leave.
Of course Poland would love to get the U.S. to decamp from Germany and move all their bases...and that sweet sweet revenue...to Poland.