Big C said:
Cal88 said:
I really wish it never happened, much more so than you might think. Right or wrong, it was inevitable, just as the US would have invaded Cuba in 1963 had the Soviets not backed down their aggressive military expansion on America's front porch. Had Russia not intervened last year, there might have been an even bigger and more devastating total war later this decade. That conflict became inevitable, for the reasons I and 70+ reasonable people who are more qualified to judge than you or I have highlighted above.
You're approaching geopolitics as a sports fan and a homer, which I understand will be the default position of the general public, particularly in the current social media and MSM jingoistic environment where the conflict is reduced to one-sided cliches that completely ignore local context and history. I am providing a more reasoned analysis based on these factors, as a well-travelled Cal grad should.
We probably both agree that more effort should have been done to avoid this war in the first place (at least I hope so), unless you side with those, like Lindsey Graham and McCain, are very happy to see Ukraine fighting an unwinnable war in order to weaken Russia, and to keep the MIC cash spigot wide open.
Unlike Graham, I don't like the path we're on. It breaks my heart that tens of thousands of Ukrainian men are going to be sacrificed for this policy, including some of my own extended family.
Well stated. That said, it might help your case if you would assign Putin his share of the blame. IMO, that would be "most all" of the blame, as he is the one who attacked. If you think he deserves, say 49% of the blame, at least say that. Say something bad about the man. Insult his mother. Something. Anything. Because otherwise, these other posters can call you a Putin fanboy and it looks like you are tacitly admitting it.
As poster sycasey often reminds us, two things can be true. Putin can be the bad guy that's largely responsible for this and it could've been a strategic error to talk of Ukraine being in NATO and there can also be bad guys in Ukraine.
Okay, that's three things, but you get the idea.
Anytime the US has a designated enemy/target, be it Saddam, Noriega, Chavez, Assad or further back Mossadegh in 1950s Iran, the head of that nation automatically becomes a cartoon villain, bloodthirsty trillionaire dictator who gases his population. In every case, the great majority of Americans will rally around the flag and internalize the image of the target country leader that the State Dept and MSM has drawn up for them.
In the case of Russia, that is a particularly easy task, because the American general public has been conditioned to view that country and Ruskies in an unflattering light (to say the least) since the Cold War, from Saturday morning Boris&Natasha cartoons to Ivan Drago to Red Dawn. Russia has been on the **** list along with Iran, Muzzies, Cuba, while China has replaced Japan on the Pacific front.
In Russia, believe it or not, Putin is viewed as a moderate
, his main opposition has been from the nationalist right and from Communists eager to revive the USSR. Both parties consider Putin to be a wimp, and were clamoring for him to intervene directly in the Donbas war going back to 2014.
Fact is, just about any Russian leader would have acted the same way Putin has, he is looking for the geopolitical interest of his nation first and foremost. Russia has been a designated enemy nation well before the Ukraine war, going back to the mid-00s. I would suggest reading Zbignew Brzezinski's seminal work, The Grand Chessboard, in which he advocated breaking up Russia in 4-5 "digestible" pieces, and he recognized Ukraine as the key lever in undermining Russia's position in EE and its overall status as a large sovereign nation. We're basically seeing Zbig's vision being materialized, though I think he would have been more prudent in executing it, making sure that Russia doesn't ally with China, along the lines of Kissinger's current realpolitik vision.
That's the nature of geopolitics.
If, say, in Taiwan, people like Pompeo and Kinzinger get their way and manage to prod the current Taiwanese govt to declare independence, China would
certainly invade, and that wouldn't be because Xi is a bloodthirsty maniac meanie, because any CCP figure, from their #2 down on to #100 would have done the same thing, lest he gets yanked.
If A, then B, we know what the red lines are. That is the message I've tried to relay in my post above with the 70+ political figures supporting this simple analysis. In the case of a Taiwan invasion as a result of a declaration of independence backed by key US politicians, I would place about 80%-90% of the blame on these politicians, and the balance on Xi, with a correction up or down depending on how he goes about with his military operation, especially wrt his consideration for civilians.
On that scale, I would give Putin a C-. I think he should have stuck with the Donbass, taken it, and called it a day, he has a large degree of support from the locals there. But then again, I am not Russian, you have to walk in their shoes to understand their perspective, having been invaded from the west by at least two gigantic armies in their recent past, much like the Chinese response to Taiwan has been conditioned by their Century of Humiliation going back to the early 19th century, and perhaps earlier.