RMF5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
RMF5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
RMF5630 said:
cowboycwr said:
Redbrickbear said:
RMF5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
RMF5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
RMF5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
HuMcK said:
I think you mistake cooperation for capitulation. We largely did try cooperation, we let them have the pieces of Ukraine they took in 2014 and left their energy industry alone. We flat out ignored Chechnya and Georgia getting swallowed up, not to mention brazen assassinations across western Europe. Three successive Presidents tried to reach out and work with Putin. Our next SecState after 2014 was an Exxon exec who had a Russian medal of friendship pinned on his chest by Putin himself. Of course Russia worked hard to help that SecState's boss get elected, so maybe that (and pretty much ignoring what they did in 2016) was just reciprocity.
What you want is for us (and Ukraine, then whoever else) to just lie down and take it, which frankly is incomprehensible to me. If their strategy works for them, why would they stop using it?
How could Russia "swallow up" Chechnya when it's always legally been apart of the Russian Federation.
Are you under the impression that Chechnya was an independent nation?
"n 9 April 1991, shortly before the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Supreme Council of Georgia declared independence after a referendum held on 31 March. Georgia was the first non-Baltic republic of the Soviet Union to officially declare independence."
You continually act like 1991 never happened, let alone1921 when the Soviets took over! The Putin apologist keep bringing up 1880's and earlier when in the 1990s Georgia was independent. Russia was wrong in Georgia and Chechnya just like in Ukraine now. Using you logic, we should be a British Colony!
Georgia and Chechnya are two completely different places.
So not sure why are seeming to conflate them.
Georgia was an independent Kingdom all the way back in the year 1008 AD
And had the status of a full Soviet Republic during the USSR.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgian_Soviet_Socialist_Republic
It declared its independence in 1991 and Russia did not try to stop it.
Chechnya was never a full kingdom and has been apart of Russia proper since the 1800s after the Russians conquered the Islamic mountain tribes of that area.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_conquest_of_Chechnya_and_Dagestan
These two places have very different histories.
"On November 1, 1991, Head of the All-National Congress of the Chechen People, Dzokhar Dudayev issued a Decree of Sovereignty of the Chechen Republic[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_Sovereignty_of_the_Chechen_Republic#cite_note-Galina_M.-1][1][/url] (Russian: o ).[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_Sovereignty_of_the_Chechen_Republic#cite_note-Stanford_Libraries-2][2][/url] Between 1991 and 2000 Chechnya was de facto an independent state."
I don't post stuff I don't research first. They declared sovereignty in 1991, when the other Soviet Block nations declared Sovereignty. Just because you don't recognize it doesn't mean it didn't happen. So, you are wrong they did become independent until the Russian boot was put back on their throat.
The two areas have VERY different histories, just like ALL the Soviet/Russian satellites do. BUT, they all have one thing in common, RUSSIAN AGGRESSION, INVASION AND SUBJEGATION. You seem to be good with that...
If you want to defend the right of Chechnya to break off from the Russian Federation and to create an Islamic emirate...then fine go ahead.
I have no stake in the question itself.
But as a historic reality the region of Chechnya was never a sovereign Kingdom like Georgia and never was a full Soviet Republic within the USSR.
It was always part of Russia. (in whatever form.. Imperial Russia, Soviet Russia, modern Russian Federation)
All the countries that got their independence in 1991 had been full Soviet Republics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republics_of_the_Soviet_Union
It was a republic and declared independence in 91. Russia brutally put down that independence in 94/95 before recognized by the World. Chechnya was invaded by Russia in 1921 and forced into Russia, again. This has happened multiple times in history. Sure doesn't look like Chechnya considers itself Russian. But, you are technically correct, in 1991 they declared independence but it was not recognized before Russia invaded again.
Ok, is this better:
The two areas have VERY different histories, just like ALL the Soviet/Russian satellites or republics do. BUT, they all have one thing in common, RUSSIAN AGGRESSION, INVASION AND SUBJEGATION.
The Bolsheviks of the Soviet Union invaded in 1921.
Russia did not invade anything. So lets get that straight.
And again...Chechnya has never been an independent country...not in 1921 or at any other time.
It had been part of the Russian empire and then after that the USSR remained in control.
And before Russia took the area it was under the overlordship of Persia.
A short lived (non-internationally recognized state) does not make Chechnya anymore real than any other break away region that calls itself a country.
If Chechnya was an independent country in 1921 then Luhansk is an independent country today.
So does only having been an independent country under modern terms allow an area to be able to break away from a ruling country?
If that is the case we better invite the British back…..
He continually overlooks the acts of the people in the Republic declaring independence. All that counts is Russia's view of their subjugation. Russia apologist argument. No one but Moscow has the right to determine these areas future. We are not talking a set up like the US, the Russian Republics operate independently.
History.com view:
"In August 1991, Dzhozkhar Dudayev, a Chechen politician and former Soviet air force general, toppled Chechnya's local communist government and established an anti-Russian autocratic state. President Yeltsin feared the secession of Chechnya would prompt a domino effect of independence movements within the vast Russian Federation. He also hoped to recover Chechnya's valuable oil resources. After ineffective attempts at funding Chechen opposition groups, a Russian invasion began on December 11, 1994."
But I have actually never denied that.
Obviously Chechens have been trying to break off from Russia for a long time.
I have no major issue with that (other than the fact the Chechens seem to want to create an Islamic state)
But if you support Chechnya independence then you have to support other secessionist movements around the world.
Depends on how many Spetznaz are creating the movement. Or how many people a larger nation moved in to displace to get a warm weather port. If you think this all happened organically, I have some waterfron property in AZ.
Russia has been working on this for decades, at least the 70's. I know for a fact we were trained on it in 1987 in officer training in the military by the Psyops guys. This is how Russia functions. It is not a secret, they wanted to avoid future Afghanistans. Putin got surprised here by NATO's resolve. That is the only reason this is going on. Putin thought it would be 2014 all over again. But, Ukraine fought back and NATO is supplying. Putin did not think NATO had the stones for a proxy war. He is now in the meat grinder.
All your Russia-apologist stuff sounds really similar to the Psyop presentation I saw in 1987...
Calm sober assessments of geopolitics only sound like apologist propaganda to insane neo-con war mongers.
If you surround any large regional power (Russia or China) with a adversarial military alliance (NATO) you are going to get a violent response.
When the the USSR and Warsaw pact were playing around in Cuba how did we respond?
If you support every secessionist movement you can think of around the world (E. Timor, S. Sudan, Kosovo, Chechnya) but then refuse to accept secessionist movements at home (Texit) or abroad (Donbas) you just look like a hypocritical global empire who does not like it when other states play the empire game.
That is where you are wrong. We let the others play the global empire game and then don't do the same. China, Russia, India and others do what is in their best interest whether we like it or not. Only the US worries what everyone else will think. Xi does what is best for China as he sees fit.
They count on US citizens making your arguments to keep us in check. Russia taking Crimea is bad for the US. Russia taking Donbas is bad for the US. China making islands in the South China Sea is bad for the US. Russia putting missles in Cuba is bad for the US. Sorry, not going to apologize for siding with the US and our Allies, especially against Russia and China! Neither have acted in good faith towards the US in 100+ years!
As for Texit, so who counts in making this determination? Illegal Aliens that have broken US law? They get a critical mass and we should honor that request? You really think that the US citizens of CA, AZ and NV would vote to succeed to join Mexico?? Donbas and Crimea are the same, they were settled by Russians to get that mass. And people like you give that credence! Amazing.
These things are not in an apples to oranges comparison.
It a crazy thing to even try and equate.
The USA has no strategic or financial interests in Donbas.
We have serious strategic interest in not letting another rival power put weapons in Cuba (90 miles off our coast)
You seem to be imply that the USA is a global empire that has interests all over the planet. And the right to intervene and interfere as it wishes.
But then claim Russia and China don't have interests right on their own boarders.
In your world Donbas is as vital to the USA as it is to Russia...and the south China sea as important to us as it is to Beijing.
And I have no idea if Hispanics in the Southwest would ever want to break off and join Mexico. But if they did attempt such a thing. Or if Texas attempted to claim its independent. You can be sure D.C. would respond with violence and war.
The USA has literally killed hundreds of thousands of people and burned down whole cities to prevent peaceful secession in the past...and would do it again in a heart beat.
I personally have no problem with self determination anywhere....no matter if its in the American Southwest or if its in Tibet.
I have this strange dislike for empires and centrally located power states that ignore self determination and local rule.