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[Politics] Russia invades Ukraine (24/02/2022)







Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
7,450
Just watched the first remarkable episode and learned so much about his life and popularity before he became president.
My wife's two lovely cousins were in Maidan Square during the protests against Yanukovich and say they will never get over the moments when the police/military/"Russian special forces" started shooting.
I've just watched the second episode. It's even more powerful.

It includes the video Zelensky made with his close team, on the street in Kyiv on the night of the invasion. He had already said to his team, 'you all have families, I won't judge you, leave if you want'. But they didn't. His expression at the end of the clip spoke volumes. He knew he - and they - would die.

That phenomenal courage he and his team showed that night, quite probably saved Ukraine. He knew that if he fled, Ukraine would fall. But he didn't flee.

And Ukraine didn't fall.

Today, two and a half years later, the war has descended into an existential conflict between Russia and Ukraine.

My money's on Ukraine.
 


Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
53,616
Goldstone
It’s all about what Putin wants.

I agree that he does not want Nuclear war. He wants power and money for himself, much more than he wants success for Russia.

I kind of think the current situation suits him. Yea, he wanted Ukraine conquered in days but the war gives him an excuse to crack down on all internal rivals. I think that he is in a more powerful and in a stronger position than he was pre-war. It puts one in mind of the totalitarian seem in Orwell’s 1984. War was constant, war was a tool to feed nationalism, create a distraction and keep the status quo.

Putin is happy for it to roll on and on. He’ll not escalate if the West don’t but the West won’t let Russia win it or help Ukraine win it. That’s where we are and where we have been for a year or two. I think we are going to have to wait for Putin to die of natural causes for the war to end.

While I agree with several of your points, I don't think the current situation suits him at all. Before the war he could command respect on the world stage, and travel around the med on a fancy yacht if he wished. He's now a worldwide pariah who has to holiday in China, Iran and North Korea.

Putin is only 71 and unlikely to die of natural causes for a very long time. I can't see the war continuing for another 20 years.
 


Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,712
Faversham
Interesting analysis on this and the other thread.

Presumably our Intelligence, and that of the US and others are constantly running simulations and predictions.

And yet there seems to be no obvious....strategy or.....even policy (with Trump likely to pull support for Ukraine, for example, indicting that policy is a moveable feast).

And also.....there are war-ending weapons available to Putin, with the same available to 'the west' if we want to retaliate.....

I am reminded of Orwell's 1984, where there was always a war in a far off land, a war with no purpose other than to resist an ill-defined aggressor, a war with no end, with only ever small gains (never any losses) and a constant feed of patriotic bullshit to the inhabitants of Oceana (and Eastasia and Eurasia too, one assumes).

This seems to me how it is likely to be in Russia. Most people support in Russia the great resistance. The minority that don't soon pay a visit to room 101.

Meanwhile the west seems unsure how to engage. It has almost, as a knee-jerk, subscribed to a proxy war, albeit we have no skin in the game, and even less of an agenda than Russia. It is as if the west doesn't know what it is doing. And in any case the west is vulnerable to a split (if Trump wins again). And as a split, this is hardly fuelling panic or outrage here in Blighty. We look at the US election and shake our heads sadly - but nothing more.

All of this suggests to me that Putin isn't interested in 'victory'. He simply wants to perpetuate the conflict, presumably to direct the light away from what really preoccupies him back home. Which is, I suspect, to enrich himself and his acolytes, while gorging on steroids, cocaine and hookers.
 


Flounce

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 15, 2006
4,607
Food for thought or silly questions?

Would the assassination of Zelensky start WW3?

Would the assassination of Putin end the Ukraine war?
 




Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
7,450
Food for thought or silly questions?

Would the assassination of Zelensky start WW3?

Would the assassination of Putin end the Ukraine war?
There are no silly questions.

If Zelensky had been assassinated early in the war, I suspect the West would have just accepted it, and Russia would have quickly occupied the whole of Ukraine. Today, we know much more about Russia and its military, so those things wouldn't apply.

The assassination of Putin is more problematic. There are many scenarios which could evolve. But one resonates with me. It suggests that the reason Putin has not been assassinated by western agents or the Ukrainians, is that the West see him as unlikely to go nuclear. Yes, really ! Better the devil you know etc. In the end, who knows?
 


Flounce

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 15, 2006
4,607
There are no silly questions.

If Zelensky had been assassinated early in the war, I suspect the West would have just accepted it, and Russia would have quickly occupied the whole of Ukraine. Today, we know much more about Russia and its military, so those things wouldn't apply.

The assassination of Putin is more problematic. There are many scenarios which could evolve. But one resonates with me. It suggests that the reason Putin has not been assassinated by western agents or the Ukrainians, is that the West see him as unlikely to go nuclear. Yes, really ! Better the devil you know etc. In the end, who knows?
Second point is a good one, there appear to be a few close to Putin who are even more deranged :down:
 


Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
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Aug 24, 2020
7,450
Second point is a good one, there appear to be a few close to Putin who are even more deranged :down:
Yes, that is the received wisdom, but it's only a school of thought.

Did you watch the second episode of the Zelensky story? It featured the now famous sequence in a grand room in the Kremlin, where all the ministers are sat down in front of Putin at his desk, which is far away from them. It was more than a bit control freakish. He asked them one by one, if they agreed to the special military operation.
They were all terrified of him, so of course they all agreed, otherwise they would have been 'retired'. Since then, they have been competing to toe the line and be seen to be the most belligerent. They all want to please the teacher, but if he is no longer the teacher, would they be as belligerent? One day, we will find out.
 






SeagullinExile

Well-known member
Sep 10, 2010
6,205
London
No.




Don't know. It would depend who did it.
Pretty certain the West wouldn’t take out Putin. The risks far outweigh the gains. Saying that, I’m also pretty certain any attempt would have to come from inside Russia itself.
 


papachris

Well-known member
Just to keep you up to date. This is in our Estonian news today
 




ChickenBaltiPie

Well-known member
Jan 3, 2014
937
Better the devil you know, seems more fitting than ever re Putin. Until such time as the West can CONFIDENTLY install a more passive/moderate ‘dictator’ in his place. Although, worth noting of course, that once upon a time, that’s exactly what we thought he was.
 


newhaven seagull 85

SELDOM IN NEWHAVEN
Dec 3, 2006
967
Food for thought or silly questions?

Would the assassination of Zelensky start WW3?

Would the assassination of Putin end the Ukraine war?
no to WW3

Any assassination of Putin, would only come from within Russia and would have to be supported by the Military. Who would blame the West/Ukraine for there own internal media propaganda, and would not immediately end the war in Ukraine.

What happens after that depends on How the West deals with the person/people who come to prominence in Russia.
 


raymondo

Well-known member
Apr 26, 2017
7,648
Wiltshire
no to WW3

Any assassination of Putin, would only come from within Russia and would have to be supported by the Military. Who would blame the West/Ukraine for there own internal media propaganda, and would not immediately end the war in Ukraine.

What happens after that depends on How the West deals with the person/people who come to prominence in Russia.
So long as the west doesn't offer asylum to the assassin 😬
 




A1X

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 1, 2017
20,799
Deepest, darkest Sussex
The assassination of Putin is more problematic. There are many scenarios which could evolve. But one resonates with me. It suggests that the reason Putin has not been assassinated by western agents or the Ukrainians, is that the West see him as unlikely to go nuclear. Yes, really ! Better the devil you know etc. In the end, who knows?
The risk that comes with the death of Putin (for which, incidentally, good riddance) would be what happens in the subsequent power vacuum. There is no obvious successor. The good outcome is something like a military coup, immediate cessation of hostilities and movement toward re-establishment of democracy. The really, really bad outcome is an internal civil war in an inherently unstable, nuclear armed state. That could have terrible outcomes for everyone.
 


Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
7,450
The risk that comes with the death of Putin (for which, incidentally, good riddance) would be what happens in the subsequent power vacuum. There is no obvious successor. The good outcome is something like a military coup, immediate cessation of hostilities and movement toward re-establishment of democracy. The really, really bad outcome is an internal civil war in an inherently unstable, nuclear armed state. That could have terrible outcomes for everyone.
Yes, and maybe an even worse outcome (for Russians anyway), those loose nukes could fall into the hands of regional warlords, newly free of a century of oppression by Russians. No prizes for guessing who they will go for first.
 




peterward

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 11, 2009
12,378
Interesting analysis on this and the other thread.

Presumably our Intelligence, and that of the US and others are constantly running simulations and predictions.

And yet there seems to be no obvious....strategy or.....even policy (with Trump likely to pull support for Ukraine, for example, indicting that policy is a moveable feast).

And also.....there are war-ending weapons available to Putin, with the same available to 'the west' if we want to retaliate.....

I am reminded of Orwell's 1984, where there was always a war in a far off land, a war with no purpose other than to resist an ill-defined aggressor, a war with no end, with only ever small gains (never any losses) and a constant feed of patriotic bullshit to the inhabitants of Oceana (and Eastasia and Eurasia too, one assumes).

This seems to me how it is likely to be in Russia. Most people support in Russia the great resistance. The minority that don't soon pay a visit to room 101.

Meanwhile the west seems unsure how to engage. It has almost, as a knee-jerk, subscribed to a proxy war, albeit we have no skin in the game, and even less of an agenda than Russia. It is as if the west doesn't know what it is doing. And in any case the west is vulnerable to a split (if Trump wins again). And as a split, this is hardly fuelling panic or outrage here in Blighty. We look at the US election and shake our heads sadly - but nothing more.

All of this suggests to me that Putin isn't interested in 'victory'. He simply wants to perpetuate the conflict, presumably to direct the light away from what really preoccupies him back home. Which is, I suspect, to enrich himself and his acolytes, while gorging on steroids, cocaine and hookers.
You're right that there is no coherent strategy of Ukraine victory.... one gets impression US are trying to force a stalemate and negotiated end.

But Putin doesn't think the same way and sees our appeasing as a green light. He will only stop when he can't move further and we give him the space.

Our "preventing escalation" causes him to escalate into the space our weakness allows him. It will only end when he's forcibly stopped.

 




Eric the meek

Fiveways Wilf
NSC Patron
Aug 24, 2020
7,450
'They are victims of their own propaganda. I found the formula of how the Russian really works. First he writes some crazy theory. Then they put this on TV. Then they watch their own TV and start to believe it. It's like a cycle. It's like it's real. When we were talking to these people, they really believed that we were full of Nazis, killing people on the street. There are 150 million people in this country. They are watching the TV and they are believing this thing.'

- David Arakhamia, Leader of Zelensky's ruling party, The Zelensky Story, episode 3.

Do you understand the significance? The Russians who came to negotiate the peace, actually believed the propaganda.

Somehow, somewhen, we have to turn that around. Win the peace. Otherwise Russia, and its leaders, will lick their wounds, regroup, re-arm, re-organise, and next time they may find a way to conquer Ukraine.

How then, do we reverse a century of being duped by your leaders? I once read, that it is easier to be duped, than to convince someone that they've been duped?

Open to suggestions.
 


raymondo

Well-known member
Apr 26, 2017
7,648
Wiltshire
You're right that there is no coherent strategy of Ukraine victory.... one gets impression US are trying to force a stalemate and negotiated end.

But Putin doesn't think the same way and sees our appeasing as a green light. He will only stop when he can't move further and we give him the space.

Our "preventing escalation" causes him to escalate into the space our weakness allows him. It will only end when he's forcibly stopped.


Well put.
Yes, it's as if the US would relish negotiating with a damaged/weakened Russia, but they don't want Russia SO damaged that negotiations may be hard to control or finesse by the US.
I even struggle to put this stuff into words clearly!
 


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