- Aug 24, 2020
- 7,079
I wonder when the penny will drop with Vlad the Lad that he has managed to unify almost the whole World against Russia?
Even Hitler didn't quite manage that.
I wonder when the penny will drop with Vlad the Lad that he has managed to unify almost the whole World against Russia?
I thought I heard the Russian ambassador to the UN state that no attacks on civilians had occurred?
I’m going for ‘removed by his own people’.
Considering ?Russia considering halting attacks on civilians. While hardly a galant move, and possibly a lie, it’s a dialogue. And that is a good sign.
Also
Patel says waiving Visa procedures would pose security risk and she won’t allow it.
What a ****.
Russia considering halting attacks on civilians. While hardly a galant move, and possibly a lie, it’s a dialogue. And that is a good sign.
Also
Patel says waiving Visa procedures would pose security risk and she won’t allow it.
What a ****.
Considering ?
That's noble of them.
I'll take that as a shining light in the gloom..
Hopefully we dont join NATO as it is an act of aggression and I dont like war.
The Finnish people absolutely do not want to join NATO so it will be trouble on many levels if they do.
Just one random on Twitter, but might suggest that opinion is changing...
[tweet] 1496047676718301190 [/tweet]
Not sure where to begin with either of these statements.
The first one - for Russia to 'consider halting attacks on civilians' would be de facto admission that they were currently carrying out deliberate attacks on civilian targets, which would be completely contrary to international law.
The second one - anyone currently fleeing Ukraine for safer shores, is clearly and obviously a refugee from war. Surely by definition, such refugees don't require visas?
honestly dont think this is so clever. apart from whether EU will change rules to fast track, it wouldnt happen in weeks, doesnt give any protection in itself and kinda proves the case from Russia that Ukraine wants to go west, they can play on that. there was talk of neutrality, seems to go the other way.
****WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT****
Not something I'd usually look at but this is the reality of what's happening in Kharkiv.
[TWEET]1498299957912166406[/TWEET]
Not sure where to begin with either of these statements.
The first one - for Russia to 'consider halting attacks on civilians' would be de facto admission that they were currently carrying out deliberate attacks on civilian targets, which would be completely contrary to international law.
The second one - anyone currently fleeing Ukraine for safer shores, is clearly and obviously a refugee from war. Surely by definition, such refugees don't require visas?
How does this end? Increasingly clear that Ukraine are going to resist strongly even if they are ultimately "conquered". So how does this play out? - no way Putin will back down and lose face. He will only up the ante in the face of defeat. And I won't speculate what that would look like as it's too scary..
Controversial, but would our best outcome in the West have been for Ukraine to roll over and submit to Russian rule?
Putin won't withdraw, he's gone too far now. Likeliest outcome I can see is that he eventually gains control of Kyiv, and installs a puppet government who the people of Ukraine will refuse to acknowledge. The whole country then descends into years and years of guerilla warfare between Russian troops and Ukrainian rebels, with no end in sight.
Others have pointed out already how wrong it would be to consider Ukraine sacrificing itself for our benefit as any kind of positive outcome, so I won't do that. But also, that won't stop Putin.
There's an (entirely reasonable) view that because Putin isn't constrained by the same electoral cycles as politicians in democracies and has exceptional patience he's been planning everything several years ahead - look at Georgia, Crimea, Belarus etc. It's all part of a plan. This is being called a continuation of the information wars that began(?) with the "B" word I won't mention here - potentially even the Scottish referendum before that where some of the same groups were involved in the background, continued with Trump, was attempted in France etc. As one thought if you're thinking "here we go again, conspiracy": think back to the Russia Report that didn't get released before the last election - Dominic Grieve, a hugely respected Tory, chair of the security and intelligence committee, expressed deep alarm at how the government hadn't just failed to investigate, but actively taken steps to avoid investigating Russian interference in our electoral system and then how they'd taken unprecedented action to stop that fact being made public knowledge. Why would they do that? There are people who have never been near a tinfoil hat in their lives who consider us to be already at war with Russia, just covertly and without weapons.
So we've already had years across the world of Putin's steady attempt to undermine and weaken any coalition against him that nearly worked in some cases (France, Trump to an extent), and if you believe the Russian Ambassador to the UK, friend of Arron Banks, Nigel Farage and others about the success of the Russian information war here that ran for many years (which yes, didn't influence everybody but just had to influence enough) - “we have crushed the British to the ground, they are on their knees and they will not rise for a very long time” - was highly successful in some instances too. It's also being called the first of the "resource wars" - Ukraine has incredible natural resources and natural resources and who controls them is going to be a significant factor in who the major global powers of the future will be. Putin isn't / wasn't going to stop at Ukraine. His next act may have been a few years ahead, but it's all part of a plan to secure the future of Russia. If you read the most severe predictions of climate change we've got 10-15 years before resources like those Ukraine has are even more valuable than they are now. Relatively conservative estimates might put that at 30 to 40 years - but Putin is planning now however long it takes.
It is scary. He, I'm sure, absolutely believes it when he says that a world without Russia isn't worth existing, and he's doing all he can to preserve Russia when he can see it is under existential threat from growing nations, particularly in Asia, and that the world is changing away from the gas and oil and coal that his economy relies on to a large extent. Who knows how he's going to react if it becomes clear that not only can he not save Russia from diminished importance, but his actions to secure alternative sources of wealth for Russia have accelerated its decline?
Ukraine rolling over would have solved nothing, just emboldened Putin. The best outcome, perhaps, is a peace that somehow means he doesn't lose face (can't see how that's possible) or him being overthrown (also hard to see). Any other outcome feels like it's going to be very bleak for us all.