I won't argue with that...but what do you suggest the West do about that? Use force to expel millions of ethnic russians from Crimea and Donbas?trey3216 said:Makes it easy when Russia was just able to move a bunch of Russians loyal to Russia into the area, and arm them heavily to fight for a breakaway. Or directly send in Russian special forces units and Russian Paramilitary groups to help the breakaway factions who were getting the crap beat out of them by the Ukrainian military.Redbrickbear said:In Central & Western Ukraine? Certainly.whiterock said:Polling shows the invasion overwhelmingly galvanized Ukrainian nationalismFLBear5630 said:I will disagree with you on the last part. I say it has happened because of the Ukrainian popular will after Russia too Crimea and there was nothing Ukraine could do.Quote:That was my point. It's been a radical transformation since 2014 (in disregard of Ukrainian popular will and duplicity against Russia, needless to say).Quote:non-entity? 2014, maybe. 2022, no way.Quote:Ukraine was a military non-entity until we started pouring weapons and advisors into the country. So tell me one thing. When we've used this sock puppet of a military not just as a proxy army but as the new regional hegemon, of all things, will you still maintain that we're not an empire?Quote:UKRAINE is already Russia's equal in many respects. Why not Ukraine as the stable influence in Eurasia?Quote:I don't understand this kind of thinking, for several reasons. It implies that what Russia is doing would be fine if they just destroyed Ukraine more efficiently, which means all the moral and legal arguments against the invasion are irrelevant. It treats spheres of influence as a status symbol rather than a means to stability. But it's stability that is in our interest; opposing Russia just to put them in their place is petty and pointless. Russia bore the heaviest burden against Germany in WWII and was a party to the division of Europe following the war. This greatly weighs in favor of their inclusion in the club, if that's how you want to think of it. More important, it has implications for Russian security that can't be ignored following the breakup of the Soviet Union. Finally, Russia is one of the few European regimes or cultures that are now resisting wokeness and neo-Marxism.Quote:
I am a power geopolitical type but disagree with the Kissinger/Mearsheimer argument on Nato's post-CW expansion into former WP nations. Yes, Russia is a great power, but no great power is entitled to a "sphere." They have to earn it one way or the other. Lithuania used to be a great power. Poland used to be a great power. Sweden, Austria/Hungary, etc.... Times change.
Russia fails over and over to keep up with the west. There is a reason for that. We should not coddle their incompetence and paleo-thinking by continually treating them as an equal. They want to be great, they need something more than nuclear weapons. An older NSA operative I served with in one capacity or another for most of my time abroad was a Russian specialist. He made a quote back during the Cold War that keeps getting proven true over and over again: "Russia is a third world country with nuclear weapons."
Russia's like the guy who's muscle-bound from the waist up but never does a leg day.
They may not have the numbers but the change from 2014 to 2022 is stark.. In 2014, Ukraine asked NATO to help them get to NATO standards, they now have civilian control of military, diversified chain-of-command (Jr staff can make battlefield decisions), volunteer force, NATO quality weapons, and they NATO training (40 battalions trained by NATO). They may not have been a top 5 military, but they were top 20.
No one has any proof that it galvanized any sort of Ukrainian nationalism in Crimea or Donbas....if anything those areas have had substantial uptick in russian ethnic/cultural/national identification...and a corresponding out flight of those who would have considered themselves staunchly Ukrainian in identity.
Would make a good case for an area like Kharkiv or Odessa being more Ukrainian in identity today than it would have been just 2 years ago.
Let the circle be unbroken.
The Poles (with Stalin's help) were able to expel millions of ethnic Germans from East Prussia after world war II...only took systemic mass murder, industrial scale rape, and several years to ethnically cleansing the area and make sure it would forever remain Polish.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_and_expulsion_of_Germans_(1944%E2%80%931950)
Are the elite in D.C. planning that? If not then at some point we have to accept that the current citizens of Crimea just don't want to be ruled from Kyiv.
Similar situation would be Tibet....does it belong in a very real sense to the natives of Tibet...absolutely. But lots of Han live there now. At what point in geo-political terms do you have to accept the situation on the ground?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinicization_of_Tibet
Same could be said for Palestine for that matter....once a new population has been established on the ground its hard to change things.