FLBear5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
FLBear5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
FLBear5630 said:
Sam Lowry said:
FLBear5630 said:
Sam Lowry said:
FLBear5630 said:
Sam Lowry said:
Poll: Half of people in occupied Donbas want to join Russia
November 9, 2019
Only 5.1 percent of people living in the Russia-controlled parts of Donetsk and Luhansk regions want Ukraine to regain control over the territories under the old terms, according to the findings of a joint survey conducted by the Ukrainian Institute of the Future and the Dzerkalo Tyzhnia.Ukraine weekly newspaper with the assistance of New Image Marketing Group, which were unveiled on Nov. 9.
A special status for the region as part of Ukraine is desired by 13.4 percent while 16.2 percent insist on independence.
Half (50.9 percent) want a union with Russia and another 13.4 percent said the region should accede to Russia with a "special status." For the whole of Donbas, including its Ukraine-controlled areas, 49.6 percent want it to become part of Russia, with another 13.3 percent choosing such a scenario with a "special status" for Donbas. A fifth (19.2 percent) see Donbas as part of Ukraine.
The face-to-face survey polled 1,606 respondents (800 in occupied Luhansk Oblast and 806 in the occupied Donetsk Oblast) on Oct. 7-31, using the 2014 statistics for comparison, after controlling for existing demographic data on temporarily displaced people who left the territories. The margin of error does not exceed 3.2 percent.
https://www.kyivpost.com/post/7557
We can go back and for throughout history. Want to get into the Crimean War and the capitulations Russia was supposed to make? How about the Ottoman Empire.
What you are saying is a Russian homeland used to be the Tarters, until Russia deported them to Siberia and imported Russian Workers. It was a boon to be selected, better climate...
You keep talking around the one treaty that counts, the 1990's creation of the Ukrainian state and Russia agreeing, even signing a lease until 2042 to keep its fleet there. Eye on the ball, none of this flash and fish lure stuff changing the argument for the jury. Ukranian Independence in 1991, the Russian Treaty of 1997, the Budapest Memorandum of 1994...
Those are the agreements that are in effect, a newspaper article from 1919 seems to have more currency with you and Redbrick than the written diplomatic agreements that Russia and Ukraine signed.
1919?
typo 2019. I was exaggerating the argument, a snap shot in time is a snap shot in time. You can put up all the polls you like, it does not change the official borders of a Nation.
Frankly, I am shocked you guys are actually supporting, strongly, the invasion of a Nation based on polls. Using your logic, might makes right. Except, if it is the US. Then, the US are monsters...
I only mention the poll because others raised the issue. But it's important to understand that the Ukrainians aren't in the Donbas as liberators. They are there as invaders and would-be conquerors.
To be invaders, conquerors or even liberators implies that they are coming from the outside. It is their Nation, they are DEFENDERS. The Russians are the invaders. Ukraine is a sovereign Nation, a Nation we agreed, in principle, to protect in 1994. A Nation that Russia agreed existed and even signed a lease with to use their Port. You guys keep mixing issues. The one issue that is indefensible is Russia taking Crimea and being there now.
1. They are welcome to defend their own nation without American tax payers footing the bill (we are trillions in debt as it is)
2. The USA NEVER agreed to go to war with Russia over Ukraine. And has NEVER enrolled Ukraine in as an ally through a Senate treaty or through joining NATO.
3. Moscow is trying to install a pro-Russian government in Kyiv and has invaded to facilitate that outcome. I don't remember you kvetching this badly when DC invaded Iraq to install a pro-American government in Bagdad. Not to mention Iraq is 6,900 miles from the U.S. border. Ukraine is right next door to Russia
We were involved in the turning over of the Nukes and specifically said, with NATO, if Ukraine went along, NATO would protect them...
No we did you NOT…at least not in the way you are trying to spin it.
The Budapest moratorium was NOT a security treaty passed by the United States Senate. It did NOT have any enforcement mechanism or establish by law that the U.S. had to intervene in any way on the side of Belarus, Kazakhstan, or Ukraine in the future.
The "Security guarantees" in that nuke process were almost all on the Russian side…they took on the responsibility of not intervening with no other stipulations other than compensation.
How every you want to spin this info a casus belli for war it just does not float…
Here is Brookings view as well...
The Budapest Memorandum and U.S. Obligations | Brookings
We need to just disagree. You will always support Russia's view and I will always support Ukraine's view.
No we need to go by what the agreement says and the Brookings article breaks it down and admits it:
[Security assurances such as those in the Budapest memorandum do not carry as much weight as NATO security guarantees or the guarantees in the mutual security treaties that the United States has with Japan and South Korea…
These kinds of assurances may not by themselves offer major leverage.]
It's NOT a formal legal treaty
It's NOT confirmed by the U.S. Senate
It NOT a document that requires the U.S. to do anything but lodge a formal protest if it feels the agreement is being violated.
No where does it pledge the U.S. to fight Russia if it refuses to honor the current borders of Ukraine.
Obviously you want us to fight Russia over Ukriane…and it's your right to have a neo-con/liberal interventionist view
But you can't lean on a "Moratorium of understanding" from 1990s Budapest to make it happen