Big C said:
Why would anyone else want to attack Russia? Well, yeah, that's the problem (which is why I wrote that it doesn't have a chance of happening). It just pisses me off that Putin gets to be on the attack all the time, without really having to worry about defending his own country.
Well, if Russia ends up "winning" a sizeable portion of Ukraine, then they will have to defend it... and good luck doing that, which is one of the reasons this war is so damn senseless. Vlad, what the heck?!? The era of the Czars is over, as is the USSR: What in the world are you trying to do? (Don't answer.)
Russia is the richest country in the world in natural resources, by a wide margin.
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/markets-economy/090516/10-countries-most-natural-resources.aspWhen the USSR dissolved, it was a free for all, international bankers and local oligarchs fed on Russia's carcass and nearly half the country was left in a state of abject poverty, probably the most extreme instance of a failed state in postwar Europe. Tens of millions starved, became alcoholics, drug addicts, prostitutes, gangsters etc. All of this was made possible through the installation of Boris Yeltsin at the helm, through the intervention of the US foreign policy apparatus.
There are a lot of people in high places in the US, UK, Wall Street and other places who dearly miss the Yeltsin years and would like to revive the 90s, but now with the goal of literally tearing up Russia into several pieces, along the lines of Balkan banana republics like Kosovo or North Macedonia, so it never rises again.
Their goals for Russia are the same as those for Haiti, Honduras or your average third world country that is under globalist debt, with the difference that Russia is a much bigger play, a natural superpower, much like the US, China or India, a very large country with a lot of history and culture, a country whose potential was constantly cut down by communism (1917-1990), followed by a dark decade of neoliberal dystopia. It is just starting to rise again, and that's a problem for those who follow
the Wolfowitz Doctrine, which has dominated US foreign policy since GWB's election.