pagerman @ work said:
American Hardwood said:
Eliminatus said:
pagerman @ work said:
BusterAg said:
BlueSmoke said:
NOT covered under article 5....YUGE!
explain that, please, for the casual f16 news absorber.
What it means is that Putin can attack European troops that are part of the peacekeeping force and it will not be seen as an attack on NATO.
It's a ridiculous notion and serves to absolutely gut the authority of any European troops participating in the peacekeeping efforts.
Gotta agree. The whole point of peacekeeping troops is that they are meant to be a trip wire. If there is nothing on the end of that trip wire though, it nullifies the entire concept. This may just be kicking the can down the road, again. Massive mistake IMO, but honestly expected given his stances even before his nomination.
Considering the alternate, sending a few troops into Ukraine as a sacrificial tripwire to activate NATO would make Ukraine a de facto NATO nation. I would rather not have that work-around in effect.
It doesn't make Ukraine de facto anything.
It does serve as a major deterrent to Russia deciding to continue the war they started once the Ukrainian military has to stand down in some capacity and likely accept some sort of DMZ as a condition of peace.
That said, this is all likely moot as it is unlikely Putin will seriously negotiate a peace deal.
The current stance is shaping up to be a negotiated victory that meets Putin's maximum demands. Peace through surrender. If Trump's view is that divestiture from Europe is in our best interest then any future negative consequences of that are of no concern.
If simply ending it, regardless of outcome and repercussion is the goal, then you don't have to safeguard against anything, and signaling to Russia that they're going to get whatever they want one way or another ensures that they're going to agree to the "deal".
It may very well be that part of our plan for battling China is to forge stronger ties with Russia because Trump thinks we can, in doing so, largely remove them from the equation. Essentially giving them Ukraine as an initial overture would go a long way towards brokering the beginnings of that relationship. It's an angle I hadn't considered up until now.
Russia wants hegemony over Europe, but China wants to control the globe. Trump makes deals. Help facilitate Russian goals in exchange for drawing away China's largest ally and potential provider of energy and resources, in the event of conflict. Whether or not you find it distasteful, it could be effective, assuming Russia didn't backstab us down the line.