Poor Ukraine caught in the middle of Putin and Natos bullcrap
Dan Scott said:
I think he makes a good point. If you know he'll attack then sanction them. Otherwise you're waiting for people to die. If you don't know they will attack then STFU.
Poor Ukraine caught in the middle of Putin and Natos bullcrap
If you issue sanctions now, then Vlad has nothing to lose by attacking. They may also view the sanctions as escalation.Dan Scott said:
I think he makes a good point. If you know he'll attack then sanction them. Otherwise you're waiting for people to die. If you don't know they will attack then STFU.
Poor Ukraine caught in the middle of Putin and Natos bullcrap
NEW: The volume of Russian disinformation seeking to frame Ukraine as a threat to justify military action by Russia has more than doubled in the past week, western officials have said
— Deborah Haynes (@haynesdeborah) February 19, 2022
UK Foreign Secretary @trussliz told #MCS2022 there'd been a 2-fold rise in 🇷🇺disinformation
1/
If I was Ukraine, I would be asking for my nukes back.Rossticus said:
Massive increase in Russian disinformation, escalating rhetoric, accusations of Ukrainian hostility.
Zelensky now telling NATO it's their responsibility to defend Ukraine due to Ukrainian forfeiture of deterrence measures in 1994 predicated on NATO assurance.
There is literally no happy ending to this thing now. Even if war is avoided it results in massive European destabilization and irreparable damage to NATO credibility and effectiveness. And the death of Ukraine as a sovereign nation.
New World Ag said:If you issue sanctions now, then Vlad has nothing to lose by attacking. They may also view the sanctions as escalation.Dan Scott said:
I think he makes a good point. If you know he'll attack then sanction them. Otherwise you're waiting for people to die. If you don't know they will attack then STFU.
Poor Ukraine caught in the middle of Putin and Natos bullcrap
If they get through this and aren't a puppet state I wouldn't be surprised to see them re arm. I would expect a number of nations consider it. South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine maybe others.Rossticus said:
Yeah. No isht.
There is going to me a lot of rethinking the "give up nuke program for protection" line. I can imagine quite a few countries right now are making plans to start/restart a nuke program after how they are seeing Ukraine get boofed.aezmvp said:If they get through this and aren't a puppet state I wouldn't be surprised to see them re arm. I would expect a number of nations consider it. South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine maybe others.Rossticus said:
Yeah. No isht.
New World Ag said:If you issue sanctions now, then Vlad has nothing to lose by attacking. They may also view the sanctions as escalation.Dan Scott said:
I think he makes a good point. If you know he'll attack then sanction them. Otherwise you're waiting for people to die. If you don't know they will attack then STFU.
Poor Ukraine caught in the middle of Putin and Natos bullcrap
DCPD158 said:There is going to me a lot of rethinking the "give up nuke program for protection" line. I can imagine quite a few countries right now are making plans to start/restart a nuke program after how they are seeing Ukraine get boofed.aezmvp said:If they get through this and aren't a puppet state I wouldn't be surprised to see them re arm. I would expect a number of nations consider it. South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine maybe others.Rossticus said:
Yeah. No isht.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_Memorandum_on_Security_AssurancesQuote:
As a result, between 1994 and 1996, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine gave up their nuclear weapons. Until then, Ukraine had the world's third-largest nuclear weapons stockpile, of which Ukraine had physical, but not operational, control. Russia alone controlled the codes needed to operate the nuclear weapons via Russian-controlled electronic Permissive Action Links and the Russian command and control system.
TriAg2010 said:New World Ag said:If you issue sanctions now, then Vlad has nothing to lose by attacking. They may also view the sanctions as escalation.Dan Scott said:
I think he makes a good point. If you know he'll attack then sanction them. Otherwise you're waiting for people to die. If you don't know they will attack then STFU.
Poor Ukraine caught in the middle of Putin and Natos bullcrap
I don't necessarily agree with this part. I think Putin would have to endure the sanctions for a lot longer if he chooses to attack. If you sanction now, the ball would be in Putin's court to get the sanctions lifted by pulling back, which he could do quicker than conducting the invasion. Suppressing Ukraine and then waiting for the west to exhaust themselves with a sanction regime could take many years. Sanctions now could also weaken the strength and readiness of their attack if they choose to invade.
JobSecurity said:
Like most americans I have little to no knowledge of world history and politics. So I was looking at the wiki for the Budapest memorandum. Can someone explain thishttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_Memorandum_on_Security_AssurancesQuote:
As a result, between 1994 and 1996, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine gave up their nuclear weapons. Until then, Ukraine had the world's third-largest nuclear weapons stockpile, of which Ukraine had physical, but not operational, control. Russia alone controlled the codes needed to operate the nuclear weapons via Russian-controlled electronic Permissive Action Links and the Russian command and control system.
Secondly what happened (physically) to those nukes? Were they destroyed, moved, etc
Rossticus said:Now Russian Investigative committee accuses "Ukrainian armed formations" in using MLRS to target Tarasovsky district in Rostov region of Russia between 5am-6am
— Liveuamap (@Liveuamap) February 19, 2022
And released picture of "GRAD" projectile from the 2nd photo on the scene of the first photo pic.twitter.com/dTgw7fadfBOfficials in Tirana, Pristina and Sarajevo said they were baffled by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov's claim that 'mercenaries' from these countries were heading to the frontlines in Ukraine. https://t.co/97uSFt9gpb
— Balkan Insight (@BalkanInsight) February 19, 2022
K2-HMFIC said:TriAg2010 said:New World Ag said:If you issue sanctions now, then Vlad has nothing to lose by attacking. They may also view the sanctions as escalation.Dan Scott said:
I think he makes a good point. If you know he'll attack then sanction them. Otherwise you're waiting for people to die. If you don't know they will attack then STFU.
Poor Ukraine caught in the middle of Putin and Natos bullcrap
I don't necessarily agree with this part. I think Putin would have to endure the sanctions for a lot longer if he chooses to attack. If you sanction now, the ball would be in Putin's court to get the sanctions lifted by pulling back, which he could do quicker than conducting the invasion. Suppressing Ukraine and then waiting for the west to exhaust themselves with a sanction regime could take many years. Sanctions now could also weaken the strength and readiness of their attack if they choose to invade.
Deterrence doesn't work by going up to someone and kicking them in the shin…then saying "you are deterred."
It works by saying…"if you do that, I'll kick you in the shin."
JobSecurity said:
Like most americans I have little to no knowledge of world history and politics. So I was looking at the wiki for the Budapest memorandum. Can someone explain thishttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_Memorandum_on_Security_AssurancesQuote:
As a result, between 1994 and 1996, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine gave up their nuclear weapons. Until then, Ukraine had the world's third-largest nuclear weapons stockpile, of which Ukraine had physical, but not operational, control. Russia alone controlled the codes needed to operate the nuclear weapons via Russian-controlled electronic Permissive Action Links and the Russian command and control system.
Secondly what happened (physically) to those nukes? Were they destroyed, moved, etc
Captain Positivity said:
Don't worry, guys. She's on it!Held important talks with 🇺🇸 Vice President Kamala Harris @VP. Exchanged assessments of the security situation around 🇺🇦. Agreed on the need to find diplomatic ways to de-escalation. I appreciate the continued, effective support of 🇺🇸 for 🇺🇦 sovereignty and territorial integrity. pic.twitter.com/E2UH2kvO9I
— Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) February 19, 2022
been saying this for the last weekAgthatbuilds said:
Seems like a really good time to take out a lot of Russian weapons since they are sitting there all in rows.
If this thing is going to go hot, that is.
Could be read as the ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine may vote for autonomy, separate nation status or joining Russia.Irish 2.0 said:
Not exactly a ringing endorsement from Xi to Putin…China's foreign minister Wang Yi tells #MSC2022 that the sovereignty, independence & territorial integrity of every country should be safeguarded. "Ukraine is no exception," he says pic.twitter.com/23ByTHcnVj
— Noah Barkin (@noahbarkin) February 19, 2022