The Warsaw Pact isn't around for a reason. Maybe you should think about that instead of a stupid hypothetical. The reason Canada and Mexico aren't aligned with China or Russia is we provide a beneficial partnership in good relations. Russia consistently doesn't.Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:How is something hostile that has never engaged you? Maybe it is you and Putin still stuck in the Cold War.Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:Not as interesting as NATO never engaging Russia yet they use it as a precursor to invade Georgia, Crimea, and Ukraine.Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:NATO hasn't participated in anything since Libya in 2011, and that was minimal.Doc Holliday said:Because we and NATO would wipe them off them map. It would be a suicide mission. Russia taking a step that dares NATO to directly engage a nuclear capable adversary over some small country in an ambiguous scenario equals Russia getting absolutely destroyed.whiterock said:If they can nibble off pieces of Ukraine....directly invade Ukraine knowing that the US had written guarantees to protect Ukraine......how can we blithely assume (as you are doing) that Russia would never test us.Doc Holliday said:If Russia is super weak right now using duct tape on their fighter jets and NATO grows and gets stronger over the next few decades…there's no way they'd consider targeting a NATO country.whiterock said:Temporarily for a few decades is money well spent if it keeps Russia hundreds of miles away from Nato borders.Doc Holliday said:I get your motivation, but I'm trying to be realistic.whiterock said:None of those acronyms are a part of the Ukrainian problem.Doc Holliday said:Our business model is going to be NWO globalist WEF nonsense and will wreak tyranny across the planet at some point…just sayinwhiterock said:why on earth would we deny ammo to Ukrainians willing to die to defend their own country against an autocratic regime dead-set on destroying the liberal order (our business model).KaiBear said:whiterock said:Sam Lowry said:Hungary is trying to take a stand for what NATO and the West used to represent. I'm surprised they haven't been kicked out already. I'll have mixed feelings about NATO's collapse, but it's probably beyond reform at this point.whiterock said:I can show it to you, but I can't understand it for you.Sam Lowry said:Nice day for a stroll out to the bailey?whiterock said:
Bookmarking this for the next time the "Russia couldn't/wouldn't invade, is no threat to anyone" tossed out
Sentiments like the ones noted exist in every country, including ours. Their resonance will wax & wane. The resonate most when Russian armies are right across the border.
Are you watching what's going on in Sweden right now? Govt. is using "war footing" type statements, telling the country they must prepare for war. They realize that if Hungary does torpedo Sweden's membership application, Russia will likely invade. Nato might just respond by tossing out Hungary. (and Slovakia might even follow them.)
The prospect of Russian invasion of Nato is not the paramount risk. Rather, the #1 risk to Nato is division and collapse in the face of Russian posturing for war. I'm guessing that would probably make you happy.
Keep Ukraine ass-deep in ammo and this will all turn out fine.
For tens of thousands of dead Ukrainians……more ammo won't mean a thing .
Biden / Harris bleating about Ukrainian membership into NATO with 200,000 Russian troops positioned along the border is the biggest U.S. foreign policy miscalculation since WW2.
If "tyranny across the globe" is your concern, and it should be, I'd suggest that the best way to deal with such to to focus first and foremost on the autocratic regimes in the world which invade democratically elected governments. Helping the latter shatter the armies of the former is a logical A-to-B solution to the most urgent part of the problem.
Three things:
No end in sight after more than 22 months of war
Ukrainians highly dependent on mostly US military aid
Ukrainian counteroffensives have brought no big breakthrough
It's the second winter of full-scale war with a resource-rich, nuclear-armed superpower that has more than triple Ukraine's population. If this was going according to plan it would have already been winding down.
Either we epically failed at providing military aid or we're delusional about capabilities.
The only conclusion I can come to is Ukraine is going to continue to fight for years, we're going to spend well over a trillion dollars and it's going to end with Ukraine being forced to give up territory. All to temporarily weaken Russia.
If that's unacceptable then you'll need a hot war with the US and the death toll will grow tenfold.
You have not yet explained how letting Russia have whatever it wants in Ukraine reduces the odds of "a hot war with the US and (a) death toll (that) will grow tendfold."
I don't understand how in your opinion they're getting manhandled by a small neighboring country that's in dire need of military assistance and they're somehow going to be a threat in the future while western military will be vastly more unstoppable in the future.
If US officials won't accept a peace treaty and Ukraine is exhausted then they move to a hot war and both sides start dropping small nukes and the death toll skyrockets. Thats how that would go down.
The narrative is that Ukraine is manhandling Russia. There's no way they go from being that weak to being strong enough to be a major threat.
NATO is looking for a fight. The US is pro war. There's trillions in profit to make off war with lobbyists BEGGING DC to cause chaos.
I think you're looking at this from a pro uniparty POV instead of a financial POV. You're trusting the same asshats that are globohomo NWO sycophants. We're nowhere close to being the same country we were last century: it's a complete 180.
Still interesting that NATO got involved in Libya and Serbia when neither were attacking NATO members….
Yea Russia should wait until there are NATO bases in Georgia, Ukraine, and in Crimea (their former Black Sea base) before they complain.
Do you even hear yourself?
What rational country would wait to be surrounded by a hostile military alliance?
I assume you would feel the same way if the Warsaw pact was around and expanding into Canada & Mexico.
I mean how could it be hostile if it has not engaged us?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warsaw_Pact
Furthermore, we already have the proximity and fire power should we ever engage Russia to cause massive destruction. What multiplier of that even occurs with an Ukraine or Georgia? The irony is Russia's actions proving the need for a military alliance for these nations.