How many American lives is this "interest" worth to you?etxag02 said:
A planet where counties are not constantly vying for territory via war is in our interests.
How many American lives is this "interest" worth to you?etxag02 said:
A planet where counties are not constantly vying for territory via war is in our interests.
Let me guess, to you the 2nd amendment refers to grizzlies when you find that convenient? It's BS interpretations like yours that cause nobody to trust us anymore.Faustus said:Then perhaps the Budapest Memorandum should have been drafted differently. It looks like we (along with the other signatories) were just obligated to seek Security Council assistance - and Ukraine knew that Russia had an absolute veto on any resolution as a permanent Security Council member.aTmAg said:
And the promise to seek Persian Gulf-style UN assistance in the case they became a victim of an act of aggression. That's the important part.
Here is the pertinent clause:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_weapons_and_UkraineQuote:
. . .
4. The Russian Federation, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the United States of America reaffirm their commitment to seek immediate United Nations Security Council action to provide assistance to Ukraine, as a non-nuclear-weapon State party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, if Ukraine should become a victim of an act of aggression or an object of a threat of aggression in which nuclear weapons are used.
. . .
Right,... because war is the only solution to this problem.TheCurl84 said:How many American lives is this "interest" worth to you?etxag02 said:
A planet where counties are not constantly vying for territory via war is in our interests.
A lot of things change in 30 years. The U.S. is an economic mess. We no longer have the economic, military, or moral standing we had after the Cold War. We can't afford to involve ourselves in the conflicts between countries. We have zero money - less than zero. You are right, Ukraine won't be our Ally in the future - unless it is in their best interest - then they will be our Ally.aTmAg said:
We have an interest of having strong allies in the future.
When you promise somebody that you will protect them if they give up their nukes, and then leave them to fend for themselves when they get invaded, then people will probably not be inclined to be your ally anymore or in the future.
LOL... you are the one pulling interpretations out of your ass. In the context it was written (3 years after the US lead UN coalition pushed Saddam out of Kuwait) it did NOT mean "if we get invaded, have a UN meeting about it." Your Biden-esq mentality shows exactly why nobody trusts America. We are dishonorable and never stick to our word.Faustus said:
It says what it says. If you want it to be a living and breathing document that somehow means we have to have boots on the ground instead of what it says, then more power to you.
aTmAg said:LOL... you are the one pulling interpretations out of your ass. In the context it was written (3 years after the US lead UN coalition pushed Saddam out of Kuwait) it did NOT mean "if we get invaded, have a UN meeting about it." Your Biden-esq mentality shows exactly why nobody trusts America. We are dishonorable and never stick to our word.Faustus said:
It says what it says. If you want it to be a living and breathing document that somehow means we have to have boots on the ground instead of what it says, then more power to you.
(Remind me to never make an agreement with you, BTW)
It's not just Ukraine. Our abandonment of friends is why we the WOT was much harder than it should have been. Who in their right mind would work for/with us if they know we would just abandon them when convenient? It is why future wars will be vastly more costly and long.NicosMachine said:A lot of things change in 30 years. The U.S. is an economic mess. We know longer have the economic, military, or moral standing we had after the Cold War. We can't afford to involve ourselves in the conflicts between countries. We have zero money - less than zero. You are right, Ukraine won't be our Ally in the future - unless it is in their best interest - then they will be our Ally.aTmAg said:
We have an interest of having strong allies in the future.
When you promise somebody that you will protect them if they give up their nukes, and then leave them to fend for themselves when they get invaded, then people will probably not be inclined to be your ally anymore or in the future.
Obviously, you make a coalition with everybody OTHER than Russia, since Russia is the one who is the aggressor. Unless, of course we want to be morons and make sure we have even fewer allies then we currently do.Faustus said:aTmAg said:LOL... you are the one pulling interpretations out of your ass. In the context it was written (3 years after the US lead UN coalition pushed Saddam out of Kuwait) it did NOT mean "if we get invaded, have a UN meeting about it." Your Biden-esq mentality shows exactly why nobody trusts America. We are dishonorable and never stick to our word.Faustus said:
It says what it says. If you want it to be a living and breathing document that somehow means we have to have boots on the ground instead of what it says, then more power to you.
(Remind me to never make an agreement with you, BTW)
How exactly does one get a UN led coalition without Russia signing off on it like they did with Kuwait? Are the words "seek immediate United Nations Security Council action" meaningless in the Budapest Memorandum? Or do they just mean whatever you want them to mean - excepting of course what the plain language says.
for clarity...ScapeGOAT said:
Women
So you ACTUALLY think that Ukraine signed an agreement with the full understanding that they would give up their nukes to Russia and that they would be completely on their own if they were attacked by Russia (the most obvious aggressor). Really?Faustus said:
Got it. "Seek immediate UN Security Council action" means we have to form a coalition of other countries and go to war if the relief agreed to by the parties doesn't work.
I'm going to go with the language was crafted in such a way that what we agreed to was what it says. The history of the document contains references that it was watered down from the assurances Ukraine wanted from us, but we would not provide, for the very reason you're trying to ram into the instrument.
Can we go to war. Sure. But only if we want to and anyone else is willing, not because the BM requires us to. That was on purpose.
LOL.. Can an opinion possibly get any more naive? I think not. Not only will people refuse to ally with us, it is basically a "get nukes as fast as you can" warning to everybody else. The shortsightedness is astounding.Faustus said:
Yes. Of course they did.
They wanted assurances they couldn't get, and had to make do with what was inked because it was the best they were going to get.
Feel free to try to desperately take whatever victory you can out of this... you need something.Faustus said:
I'll take the repeated LOLs and personal attacks as signs that you have nothing to put up against the actual language in the document and cede the field.
Our debate is only over what the BM required of us, and you brought a bunch of LOLs and personal attacks to the discussion, and not one reference to the actual language in the document, which has been a source of amusement. It's like litigating against a pro se Defendant.aTmAg said:Feel free to try to desperately take whatever victory you can out of this... you need something.Faustus said:
I'll take the repeated LOLs and personal attacks as signs that you have nothing to put up against the actual language in the document and cede the field.
But let it be known:
1) You think Ukraine expected to be abandoned when they assigned this agreement (and basically did nothing over the past 30 years to defend themselves)
2) Think this is "fine" from an alliance standpoint
3) Have no problem with how this effects the nuclear ambitions of future nations
Real smart foreign policy there.
Yeah, people act like this is some sort of new aggression. Really, it's not. It's a continuation of aggression that goes back since before Crimea. Nobody (including Ukraine) has really done much to stop it before now - so why expect anybody to do so now when there are tanks rolling into Donetsk?NicosMachine said:
We seem to be reacting more hysterically than the Ukrainians. Their President keeps telling Biden to calm down. Interviews on the streets of Kiev show a populace saddened but resigned to the fact that Donetsk and Luhansk are separated from Ukraine and basically Russian protectorates. As one Ukrainian stated "it already happened de facto and now it has happened de jure. There is no surprise here."
No, the debate is over what America's national interest (aka the title of the thread). And I was the first person on this thread to quote the original document.Faustus said:Our debate is only over what the BM required of us, and you brought a bunch of LOLs and personal attacks to the discussion, and not one reference to the actual language in the document, which has been a source of amusement. It's like litigating against a pro se Defendant.aTmAg said:Feel free to try to desperately take whatever victory you can out of this... you need something.Faustus said:
I'll take the repeated LOLs and personal attacks as signs that you have nothing to put up against the actual language in the document and cede the field.
But let it be known:
1) You think Ukraine expected to be abandoned when they assigned this agreement (and basically did nothing over the past 30 years to defend themselves)
2) Think this is "fine" from an alliance standpoint
3) Have no problem with how this effects the nuclear ambitions of future nations
Real smart foreign policy there.
As far as what is fine for our foreign policy, I haven't opined. I'd like to see a more robust response.
Just thought I'd point out the actual score.
I do not disagree with you at all.javajaws said:Here's the catch - wanting a buffer is equally applicable to Russia. And given the track record of NATO expansion they have more reason to be concerned than the EU/US does.BTHOB-98 said:
We are protecting NATO and the balance of power in Europe. The Ukraine is between Russia in Europe. It's a buffer. It's strategically important.
I'm not saying I agree with it. But that's why were there.
BTHOB-98 said:I do not disagree with you at all.javajaws said:Here's the catch - wanting a buffer is equally applicable to Russia. And given the track record of NATO expansion they have more reason to be concerned than the EU/US does.BTHOB-98 said:
We are protecting NATO and the balance of power in Europe. The Ukraine is between Russia in Europe. It's a buffer. It's strategically important.
I'm not saying I agree with it. But that's why were there.
Quote:
Liberalism sees world politics differently. Instead of seeing all great powers as facing more or less the same problemthe need to be secure in a world where war is always possibleliberalism maintains that what states do is driven mostly by their internal characteristics and the nature of the connections among them. It divides the world into "good states" (those that embody liberal values) and "bad states" (pretty much everyone else) and maintains that conflicts arise primarily from the aggressive impulses of autocrats, dictators, and other illiberal leaders. For liberals, the solution is to topple tyrants and spread democracy, markets, and institutions based on the belief that democracies don't fight one another, especially when they are bound together by trade, investment, and an agreed-on set of rules.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/01/19/ukraine-russia-nato-crisis-liberal-illusions/Quote:
Had U.S. policymakers reflected on their own country's history and geographic sensitivities, they would have understood how enlargement appeared to their Russian counterparts. As journalist Peter Beinart recently noted, the United States has repeatedly declared the Western Hemisphere to be off-limits to other great powers and has threatened or used force on numerous occasions to make that declaration stick. During the Cold War, for example, the Reagan administration was so alarmed by the revolution in Nicaragua (a country whose population was smaller than New York City's) that it organized a rebel army to overthrow the ruling socialist Sandinistas. If Americans could worry that much about a tiny country like Nicaragua, why was it so hard to understand why Russia might have some serious misgivings about the steady movement of the world's mightiest alliance toward its borders? Realism explains why great powers tend to be extremely sensitive to the security environment in their immediate neighborhoods, but the liberal architects of enlargement simply could not grasp this. It was a monumental failure of empathy with profound strategic consequences.
BTHOB-98 said:
We are protecting NATO and the balance of power in Europe. The Ukraine is between Russia in Europe. It's a buffer. It's strategically important.
I'm not saying I agree with it. But that's why we're there.
Quote:
Over the past few years, military contingents of NATO countries have been almost constantly present on Ukrainian territory under the pretext of exercises. The Ukrainian troop control system has already been integrated into NATO. This means that NATO headquarters can issue direct commands to the Ukrainian armed forces, even to their separate units and squads.
The United States and NATO have started an impudent development of Ukrainian territory as a theatre of potential military operations. Their regular joint exercises are obviously anti-Russian. Last year alone, over 23,000 troops and more than a thousand units of hardware were involved.
A law has already been adopted that allows foreign troops to come to Ukraine in 2022 to take part in multinational drills. Understandably, these are primarily NATO troops. This year, at least ten of these joint drills are planned.
Obviously, such undertakings are designed to be a cover-up for a rapid buildup of the NATO military group on Ukrainian territory. This is all the more so since the network of airfields upgraded with US help in Borispol, Ivano-Frankovsk, Chuguyev and Odessa, to name a few, is capable of transferring army units in a very short time. Ukraine's airspace is open to flights by US strategic and reconnaissance aircraft and drones that conduct surveillance over Russian territory.
I will add that the US-built Maritime Operations Centre in Ochakov makes it possible to support activity by NATO warships, including the use of precision weapons, against the Russian Black Sea Fleet and our infrastructure on the entire Black Sea Coast.
Quote:
Today, one glance at the map is enough to see to what extent Western countries have kept their promise to refrain from NATO's eastward expansion. They just cheated. We have seen five waves of NATO expansion, one after another Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary were admitted in 1999; Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia in 2004; Albania and Croatia in 2009; Montenegro in 2017; and North Macedonia in 2020.
As a result, the Alliance, its military infrastructure has reached Russia's borders. This is one of the key causes of the European security crisis; it has had the most negative impact on the entire system of international relations and led to the loss of mutual trust.