Aside from China, most of the world did/does accept it. At least a bipolar world now. It isn't some diplomatic platitude. It's a practical reality of the global economic, political and military situation. I embrace and am not ashamed of it like some of you other guys.Sam Lowry said:The problem is that your explanation tracks with mine. I agree that relations chilled because Putin's government wouldn't accept the US as a unipolar power. No previous government would have either, nor would we ever have expected them to. So it was the US that changed, not Russia.ATL Bear said:You asked what happened with Russia. I told you the likely seminal moment. I'm not comparing and contrasting anyone. But you can track the expansion of tyranny, political, economic, and social inter Russia from that point forward, and also coincides with the chilling of relations with the US.Sam Lowry said:I can't believe you said that, but I knew you were going to say that. I almost said, "Don't just tell me it's Putin." The lord of all demons and source of ultimate evil.ATL Bear said:The 2012 re-establishment of Putin back into power is likely the seminal moment. He spent his Prime Ministerial period consolidating power and rolled back much of the progress Medvedev had established. Medvedev was willing to entertain the U.S. as the unipolar global power. Putin was not, and his actions showed. It regressed even faster since their Crimean invasion.Sam Lowry said:No one thinks Putin is an Obama globalist. The baffling question is why anyone would expect him to be.FLBear5630 said:Realitybites said:FLBear5630 said:
Easy the same strategy that worked from 1949 to 1990, show strength and mean it.
This is not the same world that existed in the previous century.
The USSR is gone.
America is not the same country.
Adapting to a constantly changing chess board is critical to a successful foreign policy.
But Putin is a 1960's Soviet Premier. He is not a 21st century leader. That is your problem, you think you are dealing with an enlightened Obams globalist. He is not, he is a 20th Century KGB thug.
Even during the Cold War, no one said WW3 was inevitable. Much less that it had already started. We did our best to avoid it. We dealt with the Russians whether we liked them or not. We made agreements. We respected certain boundaries.
We're now told that Russia is relentlessly hostile by nature and can never be redeemed. If that's true, why did we ever try to make peace with them? Were we lying and intending to fight them all along?
My question to all the Russophobes is, what changed?
I've explained what I think it was. America got caught up in the idea of a unipolar world, full spectrum dominance, the end of history, etc. There's a ton of literature and conversation about it, but you don't believe it.
Something must have happened to Russia to make it even more of a threat than it was during the height of Cold War tensions, when Khrushchev was putting missiles in Cuba and ranting about burying the capitalist states. So much of a threat that we can no longer negotiate or cooperate with them in any way, lest the world be plunged into tyranny and suffering.
So, what happened? I think that's your burden to explain.
So you're telling me that of all the blustering fanatics we've dealt since WW2, Putin is the worst one and the only one we can't trust or reason with. I just want to get you on the record with that.
Of course you bring up an interesting consideration. After Vietnam, the USSR never threatened us and the West as boldly and directly as in Ukraine.
Welcome to cuck status, Russian shill.