Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Quote:
MOSCOW, Aug 18 (Reuters) - A Ukrainian drone smashed into a building in central Moscow on Friday after Russian air defences shot it down, disrupting air traffic at all the civilian airports of the Russian capital, Russian officials said.
A Reuters witness who was in the area described hearing "a powerful explosion". Reuters images showed workers and emergency workers inspecting a damaged roof of a non-residential building which the drone hit.
Drone air strikes deep inside Russia have increased since a drone was destroyed over the Kremlin in early May. Civilian areas of the capital were hit later in May and a Moscow business district was targeted twice in three days earlier this month.
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/drone-attack-damaged-building-moscow-centre-2023-08-18/
Quote:
BELGOROD, Russia, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Seven people including a one-year-old girl were killed in a Ukrainian missile attack on Thursday on the southern Russian city of Belgorod, regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said.
Eighteen other people, including four children, were hospitalised with injuries, with six in serious condition, Gladkov said, adding that four people, including two children, had already been released for outpatient treatment. He said the dead child's name was Valentina.
"We are all grieving with the families and friends of the victims," Gladkov wrote on Telegram. "I want to express my sincere condolences, realising that there are no words that can comfort this grief."
Later Gladkov said that another four injured, including two children, would be treated in Moscow.
Belgorod is the nearest major Russian city to the border with Ukraine, and the city and surrounding region have come under frequent attack since February 2022, when Russia sent its forces into Ukraine in what it calls a "special military operation".
Russian authorities said 25 civilians were killed in the largest of these attacks at the end of December.
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/least-four-killed-ukrainian-missile-strike-belgorod-russian-media-2024-02-15/
Quote:
THE OPERATION was a month in the making. Yevhen Yunakov, the mayor of Velykyi Burluk, in the Kharkiv region, had been identified as a collaborator with the Russians. "Caucasus", a special-forces commander, and a group of local officers were given the job. His men watched their target meticulously for days: when he shopped; when and where he moved; the extent of his security. Once they detonated their bomb, from a distance, they disappeared to safe-houses inside occupied territory. The group would return to Ukrainian-controlled territory only weeks later, after the town had been liberated. Yunakov's body has never been found.
Over 18 months of war, dozens of people like Yunakov have been targeted in clinical operations across occupied Ukraine and inside Russia itself. They have been shot, blown up, hanged and even, on occasion, poisoned with doctored brandy. Ukraine is tight-lipped about its involvement in assassinations. But few doubt the increasingly competent signature of its security services.
Ukraine's leadership came under particular scrutiny in October, when the New York Times reported that the American government was blaming it for a car-bomb that killed Darya Dugina, daughter of Alexander Dugin, a nationalistic philosopher. That sharpened an already-lively internal debate within Ukrainian intelligence. It was unclear if Ms Dugina was meant to die; some reports suggest she had switched cars with her father.
But a subsequent string of operations targeting mid-level propagandists showed a trend that few of the insiders interviewed for this article were happy with. "These are marginal figures," says one source in SBU counter-intelligence. "It makes me uncomfortable." The former SBU fifth-directorate officer suggests the operations were designed to impress the president rather than bring victory any closer.
https://www.economist.com/europe/2023/09/05/inside-ukraines-assassination-programme
So, your evidence of these alleged civilian attacks is:
1) A Ukrainian drone most likely headed for a military target is shot down by the Russians and smashes into a building, killing nobody;
2) A Ukrainian missile, whose destination is unknown, kills 7 in a border city; and
3) Ukrainians may be targeting traitors in clinical operations in Ukrainian occupied territory.
Really? That's all you have?
And you have no response to the numerous actual human rights atrocities I referenced above?
Why am I not surprised?
1. There's no evidence that it was headed for a military target. To repeat with added emphasis this time: "Drone air strikes deep inside Russia have increased since a drone was destroyed over the Kremlin in early May. Civilian areas of the capital were hit later in May and a Moscow business district was targeted twice in three days earlier this month.
2. It most likely had no specific destination. More on that later.
3. Not surprised that you support extrajudicial killing of noncombatants by Ukraine. Like you said, I guess it all depends on the actor. It is disturbing that you consider "mid-level propaganda" and "nationalistic philosophy" to be forms of treason. But that's not even the most glaring flaw in your argument. Again with emphasis: "Over 18 months of war, dozens of people like Yunakov have been targeted in clinical operations across occupied Ukraine and inside Russia itself." Alexander Dugin was Russian, not Ukrainian. So no matter what you think of his opinions, he was no traitor to Ukraine. Much less his daughter, who was murdered on her way to an art festival outside Moscow.
But that's all just fine with you.
Who said I was fine with extrajudicial killings? Undoubtedly, there are bad actors on both sides. What's interesting to me, however, is both the disproportion and double standard, which you seem to be perfectly fine with. I mean, we literally have at a minimum 10,000 Ukrainian citizens killed, and I pointed out numerous instances of Russia targeting civilians, yet your response is, what about the targeted extra judicial killings of traitors? Hell, you don't say a word when another Russian oligarch or political opponent is imprisoned, poisoned or falls from a tall window, but now all of the sudden the Ukrainians are the bad guys for killing traitors. Yet, not a word from you when Putin does it?
The only person fine with the double standard is yourself. You're ok with Russia invading and killing civilians. You are ok with a disproportionate number of Ukrainian civilian deaths. You won't say a word against Putin because of it.
You can rant and rave about exaggerated Russian atrocities, but anyone trying to provide a little perspective is creating "disproportion." Sounds like the double standard is all on your side.
Most of those figures I quoted come from the UN, the Red Cross, and Amnesty Int'l. Are you saying they're lying? If so, do you have proof?
The double standard is you're pointing to a few targeted killings of traitors and remaining silent about thousands of Ukrainian civilian deaths, including women and children. But ok.
Read what I actually said about the UN numbers and let's go from there.
Not reading all of your posts again. If you feel I missed something, feel free to point it out, and let's go from there.
You and ATL are trotting out new excuses and double standards with almost every post now. Just in the few days I've been away, we've heard that America is different because:
- Executing POWs and civilians in captivity "rises to another level" (as opposed to incinerating them in their homes).
- Our intentional killing of innocents was tactical in nature.
- We mostly murdered people in their own territory, not in US- occupied territory.
- We stopped short of deliberate genocide.
- We were trying to end the war (as if Japan wasn't trying to do the same).
- Our fire-bombing campaign was "targeted" (this one is just plain funny).
I appreciate the attempts at spinning our comments. I suspect you're smart enough to understand nobody here has condoned the killing of civilians, and at this point are simply purposely mischaracterizing positions in an attempt to win your argument.
If you don't see the difference between WWII bombing campaigns designed to end the war vs. raping civilians and summarily executing POWs, perhaps I've given you too much credit over the years. As ATL pointed out, only one was designed to win the war. This seems pretty elementary, and something reasonable people should be able to agree on (the key word being "reasonable").
As for the claim that bombing Japan was stopping just short of genocide, that is an interesting belief. I am curious if you define "genocide" differently than how most define it. Was the aim to destroy and eradicate the Japanese people or win a world war? If it is the latter, that does not even come close to the line of genocide. Hopefully, we can agree that Hitler's extermination of the Jews wasn't an an attempt to win the war, but instead to eradicate the Jewish people. But again, with you, I try not to make assumptions.
Hopefully, we can at least agree that killing prisoners of war is wrong, but again, with you, I never know, you're so morally bankrupt.
Intentional killing of civilians is intentional killing of civilians. That is elementary under both Just War Theory and international law. I know it makes you feel good to pretend that Japan's crimes were completely gratuitous while ours were in the service of a noble cause. The problem is, even if that were true, it wouldn't change the analysis. A crime is still a crime.
Just so everyone is clear on your positions (please correct me if I have mischaracterized), you believe as follows:
1) Bombing Japan in an effort to win the war is the moral equivalent of Japan raping, torturing, and murdering the peoples they have conquered, captured and subjugated, in your mind. They are one in the same, regardless of the motives behind such acts. Mens rea simply doesn't matter here, in your book.
2) There is no moral difference between the U.S. bombing Japan and Hitler exterminating the Jews. Again, mens rea doesn't matter in your mind.
3) The US bombing Japan is a war crime. But Russia bombing Ukraine is perfectly fine and dandy, and in fact the war is actually a Just War.
Again, correct me if I am wrong.
For the record, I never condoned the US bombing Japan or killing Japanese civilians. I am simply reasonable enough to understand the two acts you describe are not morally equivalent.
Mens rea consists in the intentional nature of the act. It's got nothing to do with motive.
Both Hitler and FDR intentionally killed civilians en masse. Their reasons differed, but there was no difference in the acts per se. If you're arguing that Hitler was a worse human being because he was a mass murderer and a bigot, of course I'd agree. It makes little difference to the victims, though.
I haven't seen evidence that Russia has a policy of intentionally killing civilians, as both Japan and the US have in the past. If they are then that is a crime. The justification of the war itself remains a separate issue.
Let's see if we can glean some answers from your post. Correct me if I am wrong:
1) You see all of the leaders of the Allied and Axis powers as essentially the same - war criminals - because of their decision to bomb cities.
2) You see no moral difference between the Holocaust and the US bombing Japan (and I guess, Germany, for that matter). Regardless of their motives, because both sides intentionally killed civilians, they're essentially the same.
3) Putin is not a war criminal in your book because despite the ample evidence of his forces killing thousands of civilians, you don't know if that's the Russian "policy".
4) Despite the deaths of thousands of civilians and the targeting of infrastructure, Putin is engaged in a Just War in Ukraine because de-nazification is at least one valid reason (for Russia, at least, not the US of course) to invade other sovereign countries.
I'll hang up and listen...
I see all of them as war criminals because they were. They were also different in many ways. There were certainly evil motives behind the Holocaust. I don't think we had evil motives in the war generally, but there were some times when we did. For example when we decided to use nuclear weapons in part because we wanted to test their effect on human targets in the real world. I would argue that is similar to some of Hitler's atrocities, though on a somewhat smaller scale.
There is ample evidence of collateral damage in Ukraine, as there usually is in war. I'm not convinced that Putin is a war criminal because I haven't seen evidence that he targets civilians intentionally or wantonly. Saying it isn't policy is another way of saying it isn't intentional on his part. Infrastructure is a complicated question. It basically depends on whether the targets serve a military purpose that outweighs the harm to civilians.
I don't think I ever said de-nazification wasn't a valid reason to invade Germany. I may have said it wasn't the actual reason. It's not necessarily sufficient on its own, but it could be if the targeted regime were brutal enough. There too it would depend on whether the good outweighed the harm.
I think your fixation on who was "essentially" this or that is symptomatic of the flaw in your whole approach to this issue. Hitler was essentially an evil man, as you would put it. I don't think the same was true of the Allied leaders. The difference is that for me that's not the end of the discussion. You want to reduce everything to good guys vs. bad guys and adjust all of your conclusions accordingly. I try to keep in mind that all humans are flawed and even good men are capable of bad acts.
Thanks. So from your post, I conclude:
1) FDR, Truman, Churchill, and the other Allied leaders are war criminals in your book, tantamount to Hitler (though their motives weren't evil or at least as evil).
2) You would need to see evidence that Putin targets civilians intentionally and wantonly before concluding the massive civilian casualties and reports of Russian striking numerous civilian targets are evidence of criminal conduct.
What exactly would you need to see here, Sam, especially in this day and age when militaries can perform targeted strikes? Do you need to see some written policy come to light, or some secret recording of Putin? Do you have that when it comes to FDR, Truman and Churchill, or are you merely concluding the bombing of cities is evidence they wanted civilian dead. Is Russia bombing train stations, restaurants and civilian bomb shelters not some evidence of the criminality of the conduct?
How about Putin's targeted assassinations of political rivals? Is that some evidence of criminal conduct? Or are these people poisoning themselves and falling out windows because of accidents, in your mind?
3) On the Germany issue, I am going to need a little more explanation. Are you saying the US was (or would have been) justified in attacking Germany to defeat Nazism? Was the German regime "brutal enough" that our war with Germany was justified? Or do you still believe we were not justified in entering WWII after the Pearl Harbor bombing and Holocaust came to light? You have of course previously opined that was not a Just War from a US standpoint.
And in like manner, if de-nazification is not alone sufficient to justify Putin's war, what other reasons make Putin's war just in your book, unlike the US involvement in WWII? Is the Ukraine govt. "brutal enough" to justify such an invasion, whereas Germany and Japan were not? In short, what is it about Ukraine that makes it so much worse than 1940s Germany and Japan and justified Russia's invasion?
As for your last paragraph, unfortunately your analysis of "my" position seems to be a position of your own making - a classic straw man fallacy. At no point have I reduced our argument to who was good vs. who was bad. I recognize that the Allied leaders weren't saints, and responsible for conduct that wouldn't be kosher in this day and age. Instead, the interesting thing to me is the seeming dichotomy in your beliefs.
For example, prior to our discussion on this thread, I believed you to be a moral individual who possessed some semblance of common human decency. Despite our difference of opinion on many subjects, I actually believed you came by your beliefs honestly, and with consistency, as a result of a deeply-held set of values. I mean, anyone who could argue that not even our war against Nazism, the Holocaust, Japanese imperialism and aggression was just just could never believe the Russian invasion of a sovereign country that was not the aggressor could in any way be just, even if like me he didn't agree with our involvement in it.
And then incredibly, you proceeded to make the case for it, utilizing much of what is widely recognized as Russian propaganda. And then you justified the "collateral damage" - the killing of thousands of innocents in a war of aggression by our country's greatest enemy. It was quite remarkable then, and remains quite remarkable now, especially for a guy who has argued for years there's never been a just American war. And it made me wonder if your reasoning had less to do with deeply held beliefs, and more to do with disdain for America.
And it appears the answer to that question is becoming more obvious with each of your posts.