So that means Ukraine should just let them take more territory now? Your argument makes no sense.movielover said:
Crimea was long ago and Obama was a weak leader, hence Putin pounced.
So that means Ukraine should just let them take more territory now? Your argument makes no sense.movielover said:
Crimea was long ago and Obama was a weak leader, hence Putin pounced.
movielover said:
Crimea was long ago and Obama was a weak leader, hence Putin pounced.
oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:smh said:
snapshot from the dark side..Phosphorus bombs are outlawed by the Geneva Convention but they rained on Ukraine this Christmas.
— Duty To Warn 🔉 (@duty2warn) December 26, 2022
Republicans who support Russians are war criminals.
pic.twitter.com/N0GyjSg8VA
^ click pic for bigger
Unfortunately, Russia continues to rely on war crimes because they both don't care about humans and have shown repeated failure with military on military engagement.
Sadly, when prominent politicians criticize their propensity for war crimes, they find themselves falling out of windows. Defenestration is easily the top cause of death for billionaires in Russia. Maybe the GOP will argue that we should get rid of windows in addition to doors in schools since all lives matter.Yeah, nothing suspicious here at all. https://t.co/gVZsJbPAcf
— Jo 🌻 (@JoJoFromJerz) December 26, 2022
You say this is a war crime. Cal88 does not. Who is right?
To be clear, I was speaking to Russia's reliance on war crimes writ large, not specifically the incident which smh shared. Lol to anyone who still relies on Cal88 for factual information in this thread given how wrong he's been for the past 10 months. I continue to urge people to invite him, not to read his posts or to respond to them ever since all of those things just encourage his spread of Kremlin propaganda and other disinformation.
There has been a lot of chatter about Russia's use of phosphorus bombs in violation of the Geneva Convention, for which he's never indicated any desire to adhere to, but I don't know whether this particular incident was a violation. Putin has overseen the commission of numerous war crimes during this campaign so far and there is no reason to think they won't continue, even more so because Russia's conventional military force continues to woefully underperform. As much as people like to say that the US and NATO have prolonged this war, everyone who isn't a Kremlin propagandist knows that Russia is and has been Ukraine's top arms supplier, predominantly from weapons left behind by fleeing Kremlin forces. There is a reason the apologists try to use smoke and mirrors to hide how poorly this war is going for their hero Putin.
Furthermore, I don't think Putin murdering his fellow kleptocrat politicians in order to stifle dissent and advance his fascist control is a war crime although it's obviously a crime (I mean except in corrupt sh)thole petrostates like Russia where the authoritarian regime has no checks).
You were wrong here, but in other instances they have committed war crimes. Got it.
golden sloth said:movielover said:
Any truth to Zelensky being well paid (off), and holding property in Florida?
Do you realize that the US and NATO countries pressured Zelensky to flee Ukraine in the opening days of the war? He declined and instead asked for weapons to fight. If the west was pressuring him to flee and set up a government in exile, why would they pay him off now to keep fighting?
The fact is Ukrainians support resistance to Russia, and the attacks on civilian infrastructure have increased the Ukrainian desire to fight back as the Ukrainian people are now experiencing the pain of russian aggression.
When Russia hits your house with a rocket, people tend to say **** you let's fight, not let's make peace.
We are not fighting any enemy. We are arming a free people who themselves are fighting for their own country and lives.movielover said:
But it could have all been prevented. Notice this didn't happen when POTUS Trump was in office?
Ukraine appears to be pawns, and we appear to be fighting an enemy from 1980. The end result may be a crippled Ukraine.
If Ukraine is taking heavy losses in our proxy war, how does our Deep State take a loss and save face?
movielover said:
Any truth to Zelensky being well paid (off), and holding property in Florida?
Quote:
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky rode to power on pledges to clean up the Eastern European country, but the Pandora Papers reveal he and his close circle were the beneficiaries of a network of offshore companies, including some that owned expensive London property.
Key FindingsActor Volodymyr Zelensky stormed to the Ukrainian presidency in 2019 on a wave of public anger against the country's political class, including previous leaders who used secret companies to stash their wealth overseas.
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and his partners in comedy production owned a network of offshore companies related to their business based in the British Virgin Islands, Cyprus, and Belize.
- Zelensky's current chief aide, Serhiy Shefir, as well as the head of the country's Security Service, were part of the offshore network.
- Offshore companies were used by Shefir and another business partner to buy pricey London real estate.
- Around the time of his 2019 election, Zelensky handed his shares in a key offshore company over to Shefir, but the two appear to have made an arrangement for Zelensky's family to continue receiving money from the offshore.
Now, leaked documents prove that Zelensky and his inner circle have had their own network of offshore companies. Two belonging to the president's partners were used to buy expensive property in London.
The revelations come from documents in the Pandora Papers, millions of files from 14 offshore service providers leaked to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists and shared with partners around the world including OCCRP.
The documents show that Zelensky and his partners in a television production company, Kvartal 95, set up a network of offshore firms dating back to at least 2012, the year the company began making regular content for TV stations owned by Ihor Kolomoisky, an oligarch dogged by allegations of multi-billion-dollar fraud. The offshores were also used by Zelensky associates to purchase and own three prime properties in the center of London.
So the line from Z to Biden to the effect of "I don't need a ride, I need ammunition" was just propaganda?Cal88 said:golden sloth said:movielover said:
Any truth to Zelensky being well paid (off), and holding property in Florida?
Do you realize that the US and NATO countries pressured Zelensky to flee Ukraine in the opening days of the war? He declined and instead asked for weapons to fight. If the west was pressuring him to flee and set up a government in exile, why would they pay him off now to keep fighting?
The fact is Ukrainians support resistance to Russia, and the attacks on civilian infrastructure have increased the Ukrainian desire to fight back as the Ukrainian people are now experiencing the pain of russian aggression.
When Russia hits your house with a rocket, people tend to say **** you let's fight, not let's make peace.
Ukrainians in the Donbass support Russia. They view central Ukrainian government after the Maidan coup as a hostile occupier.
Close to 10,000 Ukrainians from the Donbass have died fighting the Ukrainian government army. And prior to the Russian invasion, about 11,000 Donbass civilians were killed by Ukrainian army bombings, which have not abated as they are still pounding residential districts in the largest city in the region, Donetsk. In fact many Donbass veterans and residents are very bitter at Russia for not having come to their aid earlier, and for not assisting them more closely this year as the LPR and DRP armies have borne a very disproportionate level of the Russian alliance losses. Roughly half the Russian total losses have come from Donbass militias.
Most of these Donbass armies fighters were former Ukrainian military who turned against Kiev after the brutal repressions on their region that started in 2014.
As well, NATO did not pressure Zelensky to flee, they pressured him to reject any peace treaty. At one point Zelensky evacuated Kiev for Lviv, and was going to go to Poland, until the Russian forces that invested Kiev retreated. In any case that was just a purely tactical decision, there is no evidence that NATO pressured Zelensky to accept any Russian peace offers, to the contrary.
Zelensky might have been an honest broker at some point, being a russophone himself and having initially run on a reconciliation platform, but his position was stuck between the warmongers in NATO, neocons like Victoria Nuland and Boris Johnson, and fascist militias like Azov, Svoboda, Righ Sector who are ideologically committed to eradicating all Russian culture on Ukrainian soil, in a country with a very large russophone minority.
These militias have set the national ideology, a hard nationalist ideology that excludes linguistic and ethnic minorities. They control the 30,000-strong domestic Stasi, the SBU. They made it very clear several months ago that any compromise with Russia would not be tolerated, by executing in broad daylight one of the official Ukrainian negotiators who was part of the Istanbul talks delegation, Denis Kireev.
https://7news.com.au/news/ukraine/competing-claims-emerge-after-ukraine-official-denis-kireev-accused-of-treason-shot-dead-in-street-c-5958770
Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:smh said:
snapshot from the dark side..Phosphorus bombs are outlawed by the Geneva Convention but they rained on Ukraine this Christmas.
— Duty To Warn 🔉 (@duty2warn) December 26, 2022
Republicans who support Russians are war criminals.
pic.twitter.com/N0GyjSg8VA
^ click pic for bigger
Unfortunately, Russia continues to rely on war crimes because they both don't care about humans and have shown repeated failure with military on military engagement.
Sadly, when prominent politicians criticize their propensity for war crimes, they find themselves falling out of windows. Defenestration is easily the top cause of death for billionaires in Russia. Maybe the GOP will argue that we should get rid of windows in addition to doors in schools since all lives matter.Yeah, nothing suspicious here at all. https://t.co/gVZsJbPAcf
— Jo 🌻 (@JoJoFromJerz) December 26, 2022
You say this is a war crime. Cal88 does not. Who is right?
To be clear, I was speaking to Russia's reliance on war crimes writ large, not specifically the incident which smh shared. Lol to anyone who still relies on Cal88 for factual information in this thread given how wrong he's been for the past 10 months. I continue to urge people to invite him, not to read his posts or to respond to them ever since all of those things just encourage his spread of Kremlin propaganda and other disinformation.
There has been a lot of chatter about Russia's use of phosphorus bombs in violation of the Geneva Convention, for which he's never indicated any desire to adhere to, but I don't know whether this particular incident was a violation. Putin has overseen the commission of numerous war crimes during this campaign so far and there is no reason to think they won't continue, even more so because Russia's conventional military force continues to woefully underperform. As much as people like to say that the US and NATO have prolonged this war, everyone who isn't a Kremlin propagandist knows that Russia is and has been Ukraine's top arms supplier, predominantly from weapons left behind by fleeing Kremlin forces. There is a reason the apologists try to use smoke and mirrors to hide how poorly this war is going for their hero Putin.
Furthermore, I don't think Putin murdering his fellow kleptocrat politicians in order to stifle dissent and advance his fascist control is a war crime although it's obviously a crime (I mean except in corrupt sh)thole petrostates like Russia where the authoritarian regime has no checks).
You were wrong here, but in other instances they have committed war crimes. Got it.
Reading comprehension and logic have never been your strong suit so no one is surprised by your inability to comprehend a fairly simple statement. I quite literally did not weigh in on that specific reputed use of phosphorus bombs (and I still haven't). There have been many allegations of Russia specifically using phosphorus in violation of Geneva, which would be consistent with their overall philosophy of relying on war crimes because their conventional military is garbage.
I would offer to bet you, but we all know how that will go.
tequila4kapp said:So the line from Z to Biden to the effect of "I don't need a ride, I need ammunition" was just propaganda?Cal88 said:
Ukrainians in the Donbass support Russia. They view central Ukrainian government after the Maidan coup as a hostile occupier.
Close to 10,000 Ukrainians from the Donbass have died fighting the Ukrainian government army. And prior to the Russian invasion, about 11,000 Donbass civilians were killed by Ukrainian army bombings, which have not abated as they are still pounding residential districts in the largest city in the region, Donetsk. In fact many Donbass veterans and residents are very bitter at Russia for not having come to their aid earlier, and for not assisting them more closely this year as the LPR and DRP armies have borne a very disproportionate level of the Russian alliance losses. Roughly half the Russian total losses have come from Donbass militias.
Most of these Donbass armies fighters were former Ukrainian military who turned against Kiev after the brutal repressions on their region that started in 2014.
As well, NATO did not pressure Zelensky to flee, they pressured him to reject any peace treaty. At one point Zelensky evacuated Kiev for Lviv, and was going to go to Poland, until the Russian forces that invested Kiev retreated. In any case that was just a purely tactical decision, there is no evidence that NATO pressured Zelensky to accept any Russian peace offers, to the contrary.
Zelensky might have been an honest broker at some point, being a russophone himself and having initially run on a reconciliation platform, but his position was stuck between the warmongers in NATO, neocons like Victoria Nuland and Boris Johnson, and fascist militias like Azov, Svoboda, Righ Sector who are ideologically committed to eradicating all Russian culture on Ukrainian soil, in a country with a very large russophone minority.
These militias have set the national ideology, a hard nationalist ideology that excludes linguistic and ethnic minorities. They control the 30,000-strong domestic Stasi, the SBU. They made it very clear several months ago that any compromise with Russia would not be tolerated, by executing in broad daylight one of the official Ukrainian negotiators who was part of the Istanbul talks delegation, Denis Kireev.
https://7news.com.au/news/ukraine/competing-claims-emerge-after-ukraine-official-denis-kireev-accused-of-treason-shot-dead-in-street-c-5958770
oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:smh said:
snapshot from the dark side..Phosphorus bombs are outlawed by the Geneva Convention but they rained on Ukraine this Christmas.
— Duty To Warn 🔉 (@duty2warn) December 26, 2022
Republicans who support Russians are war criminals.
pic.twitter.com/N0GyjSg8VA
^ click pic for bigger
Unfortunately, Russia continues to rely on war crimes because they both don't care about humans and have shown repeated failure with military on military engagement.
Sadly, when prominent politicians criticize their propensity for war crimes, they find themselves falling out of windows. Defenestration is easily the top cause of death for billionaires in Russia. Maybe the GOP will argue that we should get rid of windows in addition to doors in schools since all lives matter.Yeah, nothing suspicious here at all. https://t.co/gVZsJbPAcf
— Jo 🌻 (@JoJoFromJerz) December 26, 2022
You say this is a war crime. Cal88 does not. Who is right?
To be clear, I was speaking to Russia's reliance on war crimes writ large, not specifically the incident which smh shared. Lol to anyone who still relies on Cal88 for factual information in this thread given how wrong he's been for the past 10 months. I continue to urge people to invite him, not to read his posts or to respond to them ever since all of those things just encourage his spread of Kremlin propaganda and other disinformation.
There has been a lot of chatter about Russia's use of phosphorus bombs in violation of the Geneva Convention, for which he's never indicated any desire to adhere to, but I don't know whether this particular incident was a violation. Putin has overseen the commission of numerous war crimes during this campaign so far and there is no reason to think they won't continue, even more so because Russia's conventional military force continues to woefully underperform. As much as people like to say that the US and NATO have prolonged this war, everyone who isn't a Kremlin propagandist knows that Russia is and has been Ukraine's top arms supplier, predominantly from weapons left behind by fleeing Kremlin forces. There is a reason the apologists try to use smoke and mirrors to hide how poorly this war is going for their hero Putin.
Furthermore, I don't think Putin murdering his fellow kleptocrat politicians in order to stifle dissent and advance his fascist control is a war crime although it's obviously a crime (I mean except in corrupt sh)thole petrostates like Russia where the authoritarian regime has no checks).
You were wrong here, but in other instances they have committed war crimes. Got it.
Reading comprehension and logic have never been your strong suit so no one is surprised by your inability to comprehend a fairly simple statement. I quite literally did not weigh in on that specific reputed use of phosphorus bombs (and I still haven't). There have been many allegations of Russia specifically using phosphorus in violation of Geneva, which would be consistent with their overall philosophy of relying on war crimes because their conventional military is garbage.
I would offer to bet you, but we all know how that will go.
U2: "Oh, I didn't absolutely say that that was a war crime! I simply replied to a tweet claiming phosphorous bombs are illegal and Russia used them in Christmas with the statement, 'Unfortunately, Russia continues to rely on war crimes.' That's is all I did. Don't read into it and think I was saying this was a war crime!"
tequila4kapp said:We are not fighting any enemy. We are arming a free people who themselves are fighting for their own country and lives.movielover said:
But it could have all been prevented. Notice this didn't happen when POTUS Trump was in office?
Ukraine appears to be pawns, and we appear to be fighting an enemy from 1980. The end result may be a crippled Ukraine.
If Ukraine is taking heavy losses in our proxy war, how does our Deep State take a loss and save face?
Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:oski003 said:Unit2Sucks said:smh said:
snapshot from the dark side..Phosphorus bombs are outlawed by the Geneva Convention but they rained on Ukraine this Christmas.
— Duty To Warn 🔉 (@duty2warn) December 26, 2022
Republicans who support Russians are war criminals.
pic.twitter.com/N0GyjSg8VA
^ click pic for bigger
Unfortunately, Russia continues to rely on war crimes because they both don't care about humans and have shown repeated failure with military on military engagement.
Sadly, when prominent politicians criticize their propensity for war crimes, they find themselves falling out of windows. Defenestration is easily the top cause of death for billionaires in Russia. Maybe the GOP will argue that we should get rid of windows in addition to doors in schools since all lives matter.Yeah, nothing suspicious here at all. https://t.co/gVZsJbPAcf
— Jo 🌻 (@JoJoFromJerz) December 26, 2022
You say this is a war crime. Cal88 does not. Who is right?
To be clear, I was speaking to Russia's reliance on war crimes writ large, not specifically the incident which smh shared. Lol to anyone who still relies on Cal88 for factual information in this thread given how wrong he's been for the past 10 months. I continue to urge people to invite him, not to read his posts or to respond to them ever since all of those things just encourage his spread of Kremlin propaganda and other disinformation.
There has been a lot of chatter about Russia's use of phosphorus bombs in violation of the Geneva Convention, for which he's never indicated any desire to adhere to, but I don't know whether this particular incident was a violation. Putin has overseen the commission of numerous war crimes during this campaign so far and there is no reason to think they won't continue, even more so because Russia's conventional military force continues to woefully underperform. As much as people like to say that the US and NATO have prolonged this war, everyone who isn't a Kremlin propagandist knows that Russia is and has been Ukraine's top arms supplier, predominantly from weapons left behind by fleeing Kremlin forces. There is a reason the apologists try to use smoke and mirrors to hide how poorly this war is going for their hero Putin.
Furthermore, I don't think Putin murdering his fellow kleptocrat politicians in order to stifle dissent and advance his fascist control is a war crime although it's obviously a crime (I mean except in corrupt sh)thole petrostates like Russia where the authoritarian regime has no checks).
You were wrong here, but in other instances they have committed war crimes. Got it.
Reading comprehension and logic have never been your strong suit so no one is surprised by your inability to comprehend a fairly simple statement. I quite literally did not weigh in on that specific reputed use of phosphorus bombs (and I still haven't). There have been many allegations of Russia specifically using phosphorus in violation of Geneva, which would be consistent with their overall philosophy of relying on war crimes because their conventional military is garbage.
I would offer to bet you, but we all know how that will go.
U2: "Oh, I didn't absolutely say that that was a war crime! I simply replied to a tweet claiming phosphorous bombs are illegal and Russia used them in Christmas with the statement, 'Unfortunately, Russia continues to rely on war crimes.' That's is all I did. Don't read into it and think I was saying this was a war crime!"
Low energy troll is back in service of a pointless argument. Use of phosphorus bombs can be in violation of Geneva convention depending on proximity to civilians. Because of how incendiary phosphorus is, it's pretty tightly regulated although not completely banned. We have good reason to believe that Putin's use of phosphorus bombs in Ukraine has resulted in war crimes but I don't know whether and to what extent the recent bombings in the tweet were war crimes.
Please continue your content less trolling. Everyone really enjoys your contributions here and elsewhere.
movielover said:
Any estimate on how many SBU brownshirts exist?
These 3-4 Nazi regiments - any estimate of their size, & do they coordinate much?
movielover said:
I just read the Economist article. The Ukranian general needing 300 tanks, 700 military vehicles, 500 Howitzers., isn't good.
They anticipate 200,000 new Russian troops and an offensive between January and the spring. Both sides apparently are low on artillery shells, but Russia keeps shelling.
Some think Russias next move will be towards Odessa.
If their motivation is Russians in Donbass and NATO - and not regime change or reabsorbing Ukraine into Russia - why do they need to move inside Ukraine?Cal88 said:movielover said:
I just read the Economist article. The Ukranian general needing 300 tanks, 700 military vehicles, 500 Howitzers., isn't good.
They anticipate 200,000 new Russian troops and an offensive between January and the spring. Both sides apparently are low on artillery shells, but Russia keeps shelling.
Some think Russias next move will be towards Odessa.
Can't see that happening, it's literally a bridge too far, they would have to cross the Dniepr, take Nikolayev, and cross another river to get there, stretching their supply lines. I think they will just inject tens of thousands into the Donbass, densifying current positions, and apply more pressure in Zaporozhie and in the north and just use their new numeric advantage to keep grinding away.
In a sense this phase of the war amounts to one big shaping operation, once Ukraine's numbers and morale start tapering off, the Russians will have more leeway to move inside Ukraine with less friction.
The mud season starts again in March and extends to early May, they could launch offensives after that.
tequila4kapp said:If their motivation is Russians in Donbass and NATO - and not regime change or reabsorbing Ukraine into Russia - why do they need to move inside Ukraine?Cal88 said:movielover said:
I just read the Economist article. The Ukranian general needing 300 tanks, 700 military vehicles, 500 Howitzers., isn't good.
They anticipate 200,000 new Russian troops and an offensive between January and the spring. Both sides apparently are low on artillery shells, but Russia keeps shelling.
Some think Russias next move will be towards Odessa.
Can't see that happening, it's literally a bridge too far, they would have to cross the Dniepr, take Nikolayev, and cross another river to get there, stretching their supply lines. I think they will just inject tens of thousands into the Donbass, densifying current positions, and apply more pressure in Zaporozhie and in the north and just use their new numeric advantage to keep grinding away.
In a sense this phase of the war amounts to one big shaping operation, once Ukraine's numbers and morale start tapering off, the Russians will have more leeway to move inside Ukraine with less friction.
The mud season starts again in March and extends to early May, they could launch offensives after that.
#US Tomahawk cost $1.87M (FY2017) (Block IV) $2M (FY2022) (Block V).#Russia Kaliber unit cost $980,000 (internal use)#Iran Shahed-136 unit cost: $9,800, An embarrassment to the western war industry. pic.twitter.com/Fu2ABiz5gX
— Elijah J. Magnier 🇪🇺 (@ejmalrai) October 22, 2022
Call it what it is: they want a Ukrainian government that will bow to Russian interests.Cal88 said:
Regime change would also be an objective. Ideally they would want to set up in Kiev a Ukrainian government that is less ideologically driven and more pragmatic, perhaps a faction of the current Ukrainian military that is sick of fighting.
Quote:
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Russia's foreign minister on Tuesday warned anew Ukraine that it must demilitarize, threatening further military action and falsely accusing Kyiv and the West of fueling the war that started with Moscow's invasion.
Sergey Lavrov said Ukraine must remove any military threat to Russia otherwise "the Russian army (will) solve the issue." His comments also reflected persistent unfounded claims by the Kremlin that Ukraine and its Western allies were responsible for the 10-month war, which has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced millions.
Ron Klain liked this tweet. They’re not even pretending it’s about Ukraine anymore. https://t.co/pud8C4DT8r
— Briahna Joy Gray (@briebriejoy) December 23, 2022
movielover said:
More proof we wanted this?Ron Klain liked this tweet. They’re not even pretending it’s about Ukraine anymore. https://t.co/pud8C4DT8r
— Briahna Joy Gray (@briebriejoy) December 23, 2022
Exactly. As if the Biden WH looked around one day and randomly said "Hey, if we spend 100 Billion that's only 5% of our defense budget...now if we could just find some willing participant to accept that military aid, be invaded by Russia and have 10's of thousands of their citizens killed and displaced..."sycasey said:movielover said:
More proof we wanted this?Ron Klain liked this tweet. They’re not even pretending it’s about Ukraine anymore. https://t.co/pud8C4DT8r
— Briahna Joy Gray (@briebriejoy) December 23, 2022
Once again, if Russia had never attacked Ukraine we would not be doing any of this. So who really wanted it?
Unit2Sucks said:
I agree with everything t4k says and would also add that we have made wars of conquest far less attractive to fascist regimes. Putin thought Ukraine would roll over, that they would have no support and that he had friends who would help. He was wrong on all 3 counts.
The world is a safer place today and it cost us less than any reasonable alternative. Unfortunately for Ukraine, Putin is a monster who decided to test the world and Ukraine presented a risk to his sh(thole petrostate due to all of the Black Sea natural gas they possessed.
Or they could foster healthy diplomatic relations with a sovereign nation such that geographic proximity is irrelevant to physical safety.Cal88 said:Unit2Sucks said:
I agree with everything t4k says and would also add that we have made wars of conquest far less attractive to fascist regimes. Putin thought Ukraine would roll over, that they would have no support and that he had friends who would help. He was wrong on all 3 counts.
The world is a safer place today and it cost us less than any reasonable alternative. Unfortunately for Ukraine, Putin is a monster who decided to test the world and Ukraine presented a risk to his sh(thole petrostate due to all of the Black Sea natural gas they possessed.
One more time, the notion that Russia invaded Ukraine because it covets its Black Sea gas is completely moronic, you have zero grip on the nature of these reserves relative to Russia`s natural wealth. I`m going to try one more time to fill you in on this subject.
Russia has the world`s largest gas reserves by far, and they haven`t even scratched their shale reserves potential:
The 2 trillion cubic meters in the Black Sea deposit barely register on that chart. In any case, the main deposit located in the Skifska gas field is likely in Russian territorial waters as it is off the Crimean shores.
Russia is the richest country in the world in fossil fuels, #1 in gas, #6 in oil and #2 in coal, though unlike the other current leaders it still has a large upside for further discoveries, being the largest country in the world by a wide margin. Ukraine is rich by European standards, the continent not being blessed with great mineral reserves, but it is order of magnitudes less rich than Russia.
Russia does however have real strategic aims on the Black Sea, as it is their main warm water port. The fact that Ukraine can sink any Russian ship through the use of long range missiles, as illustrated by the sinking of the Moskva, means that they have to enforce their control over the northern perimeter of the Black Sea, they are not going to tolerate a hostile nation threatening to sink their fleet, or bomb Criema, especially one that wants to reconquer Crimea.
If Ukraine wants to keep its northwestern strip of Black Sea, which is primarily a Russian-speaking region, they should come to a friendly agreement with Russia. China, the US or India would not tolerate a smaller nation at their border claiming part of their territory and bombing their fleet.
tequila4kapp said:Or they could foster healthy diplomatic relations with a sovereign nation such that geographic proximity is irrelevant to physical safety.Cal88 said:Unit2Sucks said:
I agree with everything t4k says and would also add that we have made wars of conquest far less attractive to fascist regimes. Putin thought Ukraine would roll over, that they would have no support and that he had friends who would help. He was wrong on all 3 counts.
The world is a safer place today and it cost us less than any reasonable alternative. Unfortunately for Ukraine, Putin is a monster who decided to test the world and Ukraine presented a risk to his sh(thole petrostate due to all of the Black Sea natural gas they possessed.
One more time, the notion that Russia invaded Ukraine because it covets its Black Sea gas is completely moronic, you have zero grip on the nature of these reserves relative to Russia`s natural wealth. I`m going to try one more time to fill you in on this subject.
Russia has the world`s largest gas reserves by far, and they haven`t even scratched their shale reserves potential:
The 2 trillion cubic meters in the Black Sea deposit barely register on that chart. In any case, the main deposit located in the Skifska gas field is likely in Russian territorial waters as it is off the Crimean shores.
Russia is the richest country in the world in fossil fuels, #1 in gas, #6 in oil and #2 in coal, though unlike the other current leaders it still has a large upside for further discoveries, being the largest country in the world by a wide margin. Ukraine is rich by European standards, the continent not being blessed with great mineral reserves, but it is order of magnitudes less rich than Russia.
Russia does however have real strategic aims on the Black Sea, as it is their main warm water port. The fact that Ukraine can sink any Russian ship through the use of long range missiles, as illustrated by the sinking of the Moskva, means that they have to enforce their control over the northern perimeter of the Black Sea, they are not going to tolerate a hostile nation threatening to sink their fleet, or bomb Criema, especially one that wants to reconquer Crimea.
If Ukraine wants to keep its northwestern strip of Black Sea, which is primarily a Russian-speaking region, they should come to a friendly agreement with Russia. China, the US or India would not tolerate a smaller nation at their border claiming part of their territory and bombing their fleet.
tequila4kapp said:Or they could foster healthy diplomatic relations with a sovereign nation such that geographic proximity is irrelevant to physical safety.Cal88 said:Unit2Sucks said:
I agree with everything t4k says and would also add that we have made wars of conquest far less attractive to fascist regimes. Putin thought Ukraine would roll over, that they would have no support and that he had friends who would help. He was wrong on all 3 counts.
The world is a safer place today and it cost us less than any reasonable alternative. Unfortunately for Ukraine, Putin is a monster who decided to test the world and Ukraine presented a risk to his sh(thole petrostate due to all of the Black Sea natural gas they possessed.
One more time, the notion that Russia invaded Ukraine because it covets its Black Sea gas is completely moronic, you have zero grip on the nature of these reserves relative to Russia`s natural wealth. I`m going to try one more time to fill you in on this subject.
Russia has the world`s largest gas reserves by far, and they haven`t even scratched their shale reserves potential:
The 2 trillion cubic meters in the Black Sea deposit barely register on that chart. In any case, the main deposit located in the Skifska gas field is likely in Russian territorial waters as it is off the Crimean shores.
Russia is the richest country in the world in fossil fuels, #1 in gas, #6 in oil and #2 in coal, though unlike the other current leaders it still has a large upside for further discoveries, being the largest country in the world by a wide margin. Ukraine is rich by European standards, the continent not being blessed with great mineral reserves, but it is order of magnitudes less rich than Russia.
Russia does however have real strategic aims on the Black Sea, as it is their main warm water port. The fact that Ukraine can sink any Russian ship through the use of long range missiles, as illustrated by the sinking of the Moskva, means that they have to enforce their control over the northern perimeter of the Black Sea, they are not going to tolerate a hostile nation threatening to sink their fleet, or bomb Criema, especially one that wants to reconquer Crimea.
If Ukraine wants to keep its northwestern strip of Black Sea, which is primarily a Russian-speaking region, they should come to a friendly agreement with Russia. China, the US or India would not tolerate a smaller nation at their border claiming part of their territory and bombing their fleet.