Redbrickbear said:
whiterock said:
Redbrickbear said:
whiterock said:
Redbrickbear said:
Quote:
Quote:
Giving a hostile opponent room to maneuver and build a several hundred miles of defensive positions is a recipe for huge losses on both sides. Not to mention the "buffer" that wants to develop and grow, not be a meat grinder for Putin! They have no say in this? That is a ludicrous position. If Ukraine was allowed in when Poland came in to NATO none of this would have happened. Ok let Putin play with the tyrant s on Syria, N Korea and Iran that want a Russian style govt. Poland, Ukraine, and the Baltics see their futures to the west.
Don't even get me started on Syria. The US has made a complete wreck of that place. They are lucky to have Russia's help, if nothing else.
Speaking of Syria:
[Syria has been at war for more than a decade. Its agony continues, with the U.S. punishing the Syrian people for the sins of their rulers. As Syria's neighbors reconcile with President Bashar al-Assad's government, Washington officials are having a meltdown. They want friendly Arab states to continue following America's ostentatiously cruel yet ineffective sanctions policy.
Syria is an enormous tragedy, the greatest disappointment of the ultimately disastrous 2011 Arab Spring.
Syria suffered traumatic civil war, jihadist depredations, and Turkish aggression. The Assad regime brutally suppressed peaceful protests. An armed insurgency emerged, dominated by radical jihadists. The Islamic State sought to establish an Islamist caliphate. The U.S., Europe, Gulf states, Iran, and Russia intervened on varying sides.]
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-cruelty-of-syria-sanctions/
Just a word of perspective on Syria:
Syria can bend over and get effed by a herd of camels, as far as I'm concerned.
Those arseholes are not worth of your sympathy.
They've got it coming, due to a dogged determination to make consistently bad policy decisions.
Yes yes
You have consistently shown on this forum that you don't care about the lives of foreigners.
But syria is home to millions of people (including millions of Christians) who's only crime is being born in a place with an unjust ruling class.
Maybe we don't help starve them to death just for that?
Christians have been prominent players in the Assad Regime, which is an alliance between the Alawites and Christians, effectively creating a coalition of two very small minorities ruling over a much larger muslim population. Do we spare holding Syria accountable just because Christians have a disproportionate role in Syrian government (and in Syrian foreign policy)?
The world is a cruel place, Red. Some places in the world, peoples form a social contract that greatly help people. Others, not so much. We are in that former category. Syria is in the latter. Now, we can let Syria be Syria unless they start poking us in the eye. We can talk to them about our grievances, but if that doesn't generate some redress, we do have other options, to include bombing the hell out of Syrian government facilities and personnel. Yes, that will have a dreadful impact on the Syrian people. Perhaps the Syrian people should do something about their government. Indeed, that is exactly what our policy was.....to support opposition to the Syrian regime. Sure, we got some target practice on some terror cells from time to time, even a raid or three. But that's not what Syria was about. It was about imposing costs on a proxy of our adversary.....you try to destabilize us or ours, we will destabilize you right back, buddy. If you don't want to end up like Syria, don't act like Syria, OK?
I think that message has been sent.
I guess that is one way of saying it.
Funding and supporting a brutal civil war that has lasted 12 long years, killed at least 600,000+ people, and sent at least 6.6 million into exile as refugees.
That is one hell of a "message"...all for the crime of having a government that the ruling class in D.C. does not like.
p.s.
A report by the World Bank says that 1 out of very 3 homes in Syria has been destroyed and that half of all the medical and educational facilities in the country are gone. The country has been destroyed in ways that are hard to fathom.
Red. We did not do any of that. A civil war did. A directly engaged Russian artillery corps assisting the local government actually did 99% of it. We did not snap our fingers to cause the civil war. We participated with allies in the region (who actually came up with the idea). If conditions were not ripe for the civil war, it would have fizzled like the Bay of Pigs. So it's not like we have Svengali mind-control over the players in these conflicts and generate & perpetuate them at will.
I mean, geez. Here's your argument in a nutshell: Russia invades Ukraine? It's our fault for not having given Ukraine to them in the first place. Ukraine, surprisingly, hands the Russian army pieces of its own anatomy?. We are incredibly irresponsible for arming the Ukrainians to imbue them with the pipedream they can win. Russia retreats from it's northern axis and redeploys to a long campaign of attrition warfare in the South, even bringing in THE SAME RUSSIAN GENERAL WHO CREATED THAT PICTURE YOU POSTED to command the effort, and they do a lot of destruction, but capture effectively zero new ground? It's all our fault for not forcing the Ukrainians to negotiate. Then the Ukrainians launch a counteroffensive which rolls back a substantial portion of Russian controlled territory in the east? It's our fault for escalating dangerously by providing HIMARS. Then, Russia launches a winter offensive, which stalls at the first encountered villages and descends into mindless human wave attacks that indeed flatten a lot more real estate but also decimate the Russian Army? That is our fault, of course, because, well, we're an empire and should be forcing this thing to peace on Russian terms immediately.
Then the argument diverts to allegations of empire elsewhere, like Syria. Even though we've never invaded anyone for conquest, and never invaded Syria to control them or force regime change, or even a punitive raid (all of which would be reasonable, given their history). All we've ever done is sanction them for use of terrorism as an instrument of state policy, and occasionally launch the pro forma barrage of Tomahawks at carefully selected govt. buildings when we catch them red-handed at something truly barbaric against us. When Arab neighbors come up with the idea of a civil war, and we support it? Of course that only proves we are an evil pseudo-terroristic war machine ourselves. Then, when the Syrian regime brings in the Russians, who apply to Aleppo what would later been seen in Mariupol - massed cannonade against a civilian population? Yes, of course that is our fault too. (because, see, we're an evil empire.)
At no point do you allow agency for anyone else in the world to be responsible for any piece of the various messes made BY OTHERS in the world. It's always the fault of USA empire building (even though not only are we not now nor have ever been an empire by any classical understanding of the word, but have actually been a constant force for delivery of oppressed peoples into democracy over and over and over.....).
This is a pathological line of emotive reasoning you're on here.