FLBear5630 said:
Redbrickbear said:
whiterock said:
Redbrickbear said:
FLBear5630 said:
Sam Lowry said:
FLBear5630 said:
Sam Lowry said:
FLBear5630 said:
Sam Lowry said:
They were embraced to a limited extent, and more as a vassal. Putin did indeed say that Russia was part of Europe. I don't remember Europe saying the same.
They tried. Look up Council of Europe. That is a good example of how Europe tried to work with Russia.
Russia's economic system was so different, did they expect no learning curve moving to capitalism and democracy?
They were moving too fast. That's the problem.
Moving too fast does not indicate not wanting Russia to be a peaceful, productive member of Europe and get along with NATO.
The issue is Russia couldnt take being behind and went back to old ways.
Nothing about Russia's ways prevents it from being peaceful or productive. Since Yeltsin's departure they've done a lot better economically than Ukraine. Think about why that might be.
.
Really? Russia best Ukraine! I am sure that is who Putin wants to be compared. I am sure Putin is ecstatic he had to take Xi's deal. Because we know the Chinese are famous for fair deals.
Russia's economy is on the level of Mexico and Canada. Beating Ukraine is like a the US comparing itself to Ethiopia.
Putin guided Russia from being invited into the Council of Europe, even though they didn't qualify, to competing with Mexico. They would have been better off forgetting Ukraine and focusing on EU trade.
Then why does your side keep saying Russia is some "great threat to Europe"?
Its poor, rapidly depopulating, with massive corruption, bad leadership, dysfunctional military planning, and now reliant on China to stay afloat.
It is amazing how you cite the proper facts then make the wrong conclusion.
Russia's demography is the primary cause of its invasion of Ukraine.
Russia is doing what all declining powers do - go to war to grow itself back to greatness.
I mean.....think, man, think!
If they are doing that then it's a poor strategy
1. They can't actually take the country and install a government they like (their military is just not good)
2. Ukraine is in demographic collapse as well
You are missing the point, the US and UK are living up to their agreement and are supporting Ukraine
[My friend and colleague at Monterey,
Philipp Bleek, has been growing weary of the frequent mischaracterization of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, particularly as its relates to Ukraine's renunciation of nuclear weapons.He was kind enough to share his weary reflections based on a
new article he's published, the work of our mutual colleague
Jeffrey Knopf, and the very strange notion of actually reading the text of the
Memorandum.
Quote:
Reading the (not so) fine print
or
Why Ukraine wasn't a nuclear power in the early 1990s and the West has no legal obligation to come to its aid now
https://web.archive.org/web/20140819085816/http://lewis.armscontrolwonk.com/archive/7316/ukraine-and-the-1994-budapest-memorandum[As for the purported treaty commitment to come to Ukraine's aid, that appears to be based on a misreading (or non-reading) of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum that extended guarantees to Ukraine in exchange for its joining the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty as a non-nuclear weapons state. Signed by Russia, the United States, and the United Kingdom (with France and China, the other two NPT nuclear weapons states, separately making similar commitments), the document was part of the price Ukraine demanded in order to join Belarus and Kazakhstan in transferring nuclear weapons on their soil after the collapse of the Soviet Union to Russia, a diplomatic coup for the Clinton administration, eager to prevent the emergence of new nuclear-armed states.
A lot of folks, including apparently
a former British ambassador to
Moscow, now seem convinced that NATO's failure to respond more robustly to Russia's crass annexation of Crimea, and perhaps more of Ukraine in the coming weeks, violates commitments the United States and United Kingdom made under the agreement.
One gets the impression that many of those opining about the Budapest Memorandum haven't read it, despite the fact that it's readily accessible online]