It has nothing to do with fair. It's about not buddying up with our greatest adversary to pressure our ally to give up, and give Russia everything they want. You don't reward behavior like what Russia has done in starting an illegal war with a sovereign nation by allowing Russia to keep all the land they're illegally occupying.
Discussion
They’ve been warning about their red lines since the 90s and certain people in US ignored the warnings. Ukraine was never our ally, it was our pawn.
That's OK plainly not true. You're revising history, and selectively deciding which facts you'll accept.
Got my dates wrong. This is from 2008 I guess:
Yes but in 1994 people were already speculating that NATO expanding into the no-mans-land would be seen by Russia as aggression, as Jack Matlock says in this video I posted recently which was a conversation that happened on the day of the Budapest Memorandum: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHm_7T7QNl8
Because NATO is not an economic union, but a miliary one. And while military unions are defensive in nature, enemy nations can't be sure of that (it's called the security dilemma). And NATO weaponry went into these countries, which even Kissinger (who was pro NATO expansion) argued we shouldn't do.
It makes sense. US wouldn’t tolerate Russia or China building up anti ballistic defense systems in Canada or Mexico or even South America. It’s strange that some think that only applies to us.
military brass often take the security dilemma even more seriously by thinking ahead of the politically foreseable future into geographical imperatives.
A = Russia's mindset for centuries has been to have a large buffer because the plains are hard to defend.
B = Now suppose for the sake of argument, as premises, that NATO is 100% defensive and so russophile that there is 0% chance that anything bad to russia happens in the foreseable future given current leaders and politics.
A + B => fine, but if UA is in NATO, how would russia be sure these premises would hold 30 or 50 years in the future? They have to stop it now, anyway, to avoid a future existential threat. They said repeteadly that UA in NATO would be a red line. Right or wrong, they see it as a threat, with some reason.
Ok, I'm going to bed now. Fortunately, this fight will still be going on tomorrow and we can pick it up then. Lol I appreciate the civil discussion, tho. Gnight buddy!
This "don't reward bad behavior" argument, which I've heard countless times now, is super weak. Because Russia has lost hundreds of thousands of men. They paid dearly so far for this war (but not as much as Ukraine). You think that they will say "that was easy we didn't get punished, so let's go do it again?" No, the cost of this war was so high already that we don't have to make it even more costly to avoid moral hazard. I'm sure it is already clear to all would-be aggressors that the cost of aggression is super high.
You seem to care very little about how Putin works. Putin at no point cared about russian people nor ukrainian people. He cares about restoring the great Russia Stalin has built.
Perhaps. But how is that relevant? If you can predict that Russia will take all the land and win, what then should you do? Fight and lose? That just does not make sense to me. Just because Putin is evil and wrong and expansionary and aggressive... that doesn't mean you will win if you fight him.
A lot of people think that if the US with all it's military might stood behind Ukraine fully, moved in forces, that Russia would fold. And I think they are probably right. I think the US probably could stop this war by taking aggressive action aganst Russia.
But probably isn't good enough. Because if they are wrong we get nuclear armageddon. So instead of hundreds of thousands of people die, billions of people die.
And so in a "less death" kind of calculus, I'd rather that Russia win, even if he does "keep going" into Moldova and right up to NATO's border.
He won't attack NATO, that would be suicide, and if he did I 100% support starting WW3 and putting him down. But not until he attacks NATO.
What is the advantage of the west stopping him later instead of stopping him early?
And how in the world should Russia win, when Ukraine just has far superior weapon?
manpower? The idea of fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian doesn't seem right.
This is barely something that is the decision of defending forces if like this or not.
Defenders at most can decide how hard it will be to kill them. But if they gonna be killed or not is the offenders decision when it is within their powers. But it is clear, that the united west has the means to empower the Ukraine to defend their lives and their freedom. The question is only if we are willing to help.
Or they could negotiate a ceasefire and not die at all. But I don't want my country to do everything in it's power to ensure that doesn't happen, which seems like what the US and Europe have been doing, at least up till Trump.
Ukraine doesn't have superior weapons, and they barely have soldiers left, they are having to conscript 18 year old boys and elderly men.
Quit talking out your ass.
The BBC wouldnt lie would they?
We probably should have just let Russia join NATO when they applied, or at least given them a path to join after certain reforms.
Wut? The whole purpose of NATO is to protect its member nations from Russian expansion and aggression. That's explicitly why it was formed. Bringing a fox into a clubhouse for hens under the belief that doing so will make the hens safer is preposterous. I think that idea is a non-starter. Not a surprise that it was Putin who suggested it.
It was to protect from Soviet expansion, and when the USSR fell apart, there was a chance to change the paradigm, but it didn't happen. Is it any wonder that Putin thinks NATO's purpose is to stand against Russia and keep them down?
The pro-Russia sympathizing is really disturbing to me. It's the result of nonstop propaganda campaigns, and influential people softening Russia's image via Western media. Respectfully, I disagree with your perspective on the matter.
You're reading way more into what I'm saying than intend. Is it really so radical to say that maybe, had the western world brought Russia into the fold and treated them like an equal while encouraging improvement where needed 35 years ago, we would likely have been in a better place than we are now?