When you tell us what Russia is "openly saying," it's a good bet they're saying the opposite. And your history is comically over-simplified if you're suggesting that hostilities between Russia and its neighbors have always been a one-way street.whiterock said:They're openly saying it.Sam Lowry said:Absolute nonsense.whiterock said:Russia is not going to stop at Ukraine. They want it all, and more.Redbrickbear said:
[The War Our Leaders Are Preparing Us For:
Thomas Fazi writes in UnHerd that Western leaders are sleepwalking towards nuclear war. Excerpt:Quote:
But perhaps the real question should be: how did we come to legitimise and even normalise the possibility of a large-scale war with Russia when deep down we all know that it would result in catastrophe, even if it remained limited to purely conventional measures? Our political and military leaders would likely reply that we don't have a choice: that we are faced with an evil enemy bent on destroying us regardless of what we do. The implication is that there is nothing we can do to prevent this outcome; we can only prepare for it.
This deterministic narrative isn't just untethered from reality; it's also incredibly dangerous. As Nina L. Khrushcheva, a Russian-American professor of international affairs at The New School in New York, recently said: "Putin has not shown any desire to wage war on NATO. But, by stoking fear that he would, NATO risks creating a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy. Even I a consistent critic of Putin find this thoroughly provocative and foolish."
The implicit message shouldn't be underestimated: that whether Western leaders believe their own propaganda or not is irrelevant what matters is how this is perceived in Russia. If the latter believes that Western countries are serious about the inevitability of war, it's easy to see how it might conclude that Nato could decide to strike first at some point, and might therefore choose to pre-empt such as an attack by making the first move as it did in Ukraine, but on a much larger scale.
This becomes all the more terrifying when we consider that we are dealing with a country armed with thousands of nuclear weapons. In the public debate, the risk of nuclear war is generally treated as an impossible scenario. Some even still maintain nuclear weapons act as a powerful deterrent against escalation.
Yet, none other than general Cristopher Cavoli, Nato supreme allied commander and head of US European Command, recently cautioned against the danger of thinking in these terms. Among other things, he noted that the US and Russia have virtually no active nuclear hotline, as they had during the Cold War, hugely increasing the risk of accidentally triggering a nuclear conflict, especially given the ongoing escalatory actions and rhetoric on both sides. "How," he asked, "do we go ahead doing all of this and re-establishing our collective defence capability without being threatening and accidentally having the effect we don't want?" The implication was that, by inflating the threat of war, we also risk conjuring it. And yet, only in January, it was reported that the US was planning to station nuclear weapons in the UK for the first time in 15 years.
As someone who came of age politically in the 1980s, when everybody was really afraid of nuclear conflict, the idea that very few people nowadays enthusiasts for Western involvement in the Ukraine war seem to think at all about it. It's like the leadership class in government, the military, think tanks, and the media have simply compartmentalized it away.
It's not like they had to say it, either. History tells the story. Russia doesn't want the whole world; just the parts it touches. That's why the Baltics, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, all ASKED to join Nato. And now that Russia is invading its neighbors again, Finland and Sweden, the international paragons of neutrality, ASKED to join Nato.
You yahoos alleging that Nato aggression is the cause of Russian expansionism are just regurgitating Kremlin propaganda.
According to you, one of our goals was to keep the Russian army in Russia. We failed at that. Another goal was to weaken their army. We failed at that too. At some point you have to wonder what the goal really is (or how competent our leadership is).
I'll go back to something you said on the first page of the thread:
Indeed it is. What you're overlooking, or expecting us to overlook, is that pushing NATO right up to Russia's border creates the exact same risk. If you really want to avoid it, the logical way is to maintain a neutral buffer. The only reason to bring Ukraine into NATO is to use it against Russia.Quote:
Russia doesn't have to invade and defeat NATO, as your analysis presumes. Russia will try to undermine it from within, facilitated by gunboat diplomacy on NATO borders to make all players in the frontline states be more cautious in their pro-Nato/anti-=Russia policies. Then. One election. One coup. And we will have the prospect of Russia and Nato poised on opposite borders of a Nato state preparing to come to the rescue of a new government calling for help. THAT is something to lose sleep over, friend.