Here's the thing, DeSantis is…the governor of Florida right now, and was only a US Representative. What is your big 'gotcha' about his criticism of Obama in 2014 as far as this goes? You agreed with him then about Obama-Biden being wrong about it and he's now wrong in your eyes?mike0305 said:
Rgd Desantis, honestly I just grabbed the first article I saw when I googled. His position is common knowledge. You seem pretty well informed so I'm surprised you haven't heard this.
My point on "Isolationist" is this recent Rep trope that we shouldn't get involved in foreign affairs. I hear this repeated ad nauseam here recently and I don't think most have a clue what it means, or just how gray that line is.
So, the Budapest memorandum. A clinton deal, but our aim was nuke non proliferation & largely bipartisan. We guaranteed security for Ukraine. I guess we shouldn't do these deals anymore, right? Who cares about nuke proliferation and upholding agreements.
And the Nordstream2 sanctions that were republican, let's not engage in such acts anymore. We don't care what happens there right? And while we're at it, let's skip attacks on Biden since we shouldn't have done it in the first place.
There was a ton of Rep involvement in Ukraine historically, including your chosen pres nominee. So let's skip all the obscure crap about biden that is unproven at best? Yea sure, it's all his fault.
The Budapest memorandum, sure, if we want to start our historical interest in Ukraine in the early part of the Clinton administration, that sort of began the sealing of Ukraine's fate. And why, exactly did we need to commit to armed support or otherwise of Ukraine if it is ever invaded? How dumb was that? What did it accomplish then or now?
I'd ask, instead, what the wannabe American crusaders see our role in Ukraine as?
Ol Joe Biden was…pretty involved. For a LONG time. Again, he's met every Russian/Soviet premier since 1979. Unproven? 6 times in 8 years? Burisma, btw, was based in Cyprus, and actually run by Russian crooks/oligarchs. Biden's $$$ to Russia and Ukraine is and has been seedy at very best. And to revisit a point; American meddling under Obama-McCain-Nuland in Ukraine in the 'maiden revolution' was disgusting, active, and violative of any respect for independence.Quote:
The Arrogance of U.S. Leaders
The latest screed complaining about U.S. reluctance to put the interests of other nations first comes from journalist Natalia Antonova, who denouncedthose who question aid to Ukraine as "supporters of foreign dictators" and who criticize Washington's prior destructive failures, such as the Iraq invasion, as promoting the narrative that "Americans should give up and let people like Russian President Vladimir Putin run the world."
Ivory tower warriors overrun Washington. Professed humanitarians in the image of Madeleine Albright, they ask why America has such a wonderful military if they can never use it. In their view, the world is a grand chess game, and U.S. personnel are pawns to be sacrificed at will. Why the populist resistance to fulfilling America's evident destiny?
These crusader wannabes are particularly dismissive about the ill consequences to others you know, foreign civilians die all the time. So why worry if U.S. military action adds to the toll?
Again, Albright famously spoke for Washington's foreign policy establishment when she explained "we think the price is worth it" in response to a query about the countless Iraqi children allegedly killed by economic sanctions. Why should a great power like America be hampered by such unimportant matters as the welfare of foreigners, even kids?
After all, Albright as close to the perfect embodiment of hubris and callousness as one could find in Washington also insisted that America stands taller and therefore sees further. Peering into the future, its leaders glimpse a new world to be created through U.S. military intervention. And she, like a deity, viewed the result as "very good."
If we hadn't signed the Budapest memorandum, and Ukraine had nukes, guess what, Russia might not have taken Crimea, or the "Donbas" more recently. Obama made it clear we weren't taking action to change that course back in 2014.
Seriously read this article, anyone who cares about the actual recent (within 10 years!) history here.
Why are you asking about sanctions on the nordstream 2 pipeline? Yes, that was right to try to push Germany from such reliance on Russian oil and gas. Sanctions won't deter an invasion but they can impact economic decisions. Biden, of course, furiously lobbied the senate to have those sanctions he removed not re-instated via legislation, supporting Putin right through December 2021.
You keep labeling my positions as 'isolationist' but these actions, and the energy stagflation of 2022 that ensued, are what led to the economic harm globally (including the US economy) which we are suffering through (including the banking disasters).
I'm not alone in just not particularly caring whether Ukraine loses a third or more of their geography to Moscow. I don't think they'll just keep right on rolling over to Warsaw, by any means. War is expensive, often mismanaged from afar, and rarely achieves a quick or lasting objective as defined by our Washington 'wannabe crusaders.' Let Europe decide how to deal with Russia in Europe, and pay the price to do so/live with their decisions.