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namelessfly
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To avoid running afoul of the limitations on embedded quotes, I will reply to Zakharra in a stand alone thread.
The biggest point to consider is that there are two sides to every conflict. Everyone has certain interests and aspirations that are legitimate as well as demands that are not. More often than not, even the legitimate interests of peoples involved in a situation conflict. Either compromises are negotiated or people go to war. The current situation in Ukraine is a direct result of President Obama disrupting the compromise on the status of Ukraine that had been negotiated as the Soviet Union imploded. Ukraine became independent but nonaligned. That compromise was vitally needed to enable a "soft landing" for Russia to avert a nuclear war. Everyone understood that ethnic Russians had migrated to Ukraine under the Tzars as well as Stalin to displace ethnic Ukrainians as well as Crimean Tartars. An independent but nonaligned Ukraine was a reasonable compromise that could protect the interests of ethnic Russians in Crimea and Eastern areas. The coup that Obama and Victoria Nuland incited and supported was supported by diverse interests that included some genuine advocates for freedom. Among those groups were Crimean Tartars who had been exiled to Siberia by Stalin. They wanted to return home which is reasonable, but their return home would inevitably dilute the political power of ethnic Russians. Given the fact that the Tartars are Muslims and various experiences such as the Breslan school massacre, the Russians are reasonably alarmed. I know that it is not politically correct, particularly in Europe, to take notice of the indisputable fact that Muslims have become incredibly aggressive in committing ethnic cleansing. The fall of Saddam has resulted in the devastation of Christian and remnant Jewish communities in Iraq. The same has occurred in the Balkans where the Serbs and other Slavic peoples have been devastated thanks to air support from Nato. I am taking such a hard line, insensitive attitude because this "Duty to Protect" philosophy that has gotten the US needlessly involved in wars is mostly about protecting the economic and political power of the EU. It is unlikely that the 9-11 attacks would have occurred if the Balkans jihad had not sustained and inflamed Islamic radicalism. Now that the EU has provoked a needless confrontation with Russia by manipulating Obama into engineering the coup in Ukraine, I am content to have the United States sit on the sidelines rather than become militarily involved. BTW, it is an indisputable fact that American liberals are easily manipulated by European special interests because they suffer from an inferiority complex and view Europeans as culturally and politically more sophisticated. The many criticisms of the US on this forum that are prefaced with "every civilized country" simply confirm this. Given the Europeans penchant for starting wars that the US has to finish for them, I am unimpressed by European sophistication. The US treaty with NATO does not obligate the US to intervene in Ukraine. Watching the EU get it's ass kicked by Putin's Russia would be amusing to me. |
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PeterZ
Posts: 6432
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I believe that the majority of Americans will agree with Nameless here. I am not sure who in the US would support military intervention in Ukraine. |
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Michael Riddell
Posts: 352
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To pull this back to the flight itself, the bodies of most of the victims are now in Kharkiv:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-28416973 At the request of the Dutch Government, the black boxes from the flight are to be examined at Farnborough in the UK: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-28424115 Finally, in it's "Solarian League-esque" oh-so-slow way the EU has decided to widen it's sanctions against Russia, but only after much prodding: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-28415248 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-28400218 We'll see if some of the Governments are really prepared to see their economies suffer from the effects of increased sanctions, especially Germany. In the meantime, this has to be related, the timing's way too convenient: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-28416532 UK polling suggests the attitude of the British public has hardened, but direct military intervention and providing financial and military support to Ukraine is still a no-no: http://yougov.co.uk/news/2014/07/22/mh17-plane-crash-increased-support-harder-line-san/ Mind you, it's only a sample of 1634 people! ![]() Mike. ---------------------
Gonnae no DAE that! Why? Just gonnae NO! --------------------- |
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Zakharra
Posts: 619
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From what I understand, Ukraine was leaning in favor of joining the EU and possibly NATO before the now ousted President of Ukraine said 'Nope!' and ran towards Russia. That's why the rebellion broke out. The population of Ukraine didn't want to be a part of Russia or have closer ties with it. You could say that Putin had a hand in the meltdown in Ukraine when things didn't go his way. Since the ouster, he's been pushing to absorb/annex parts of Ukraine, so I see him as being one of the biggest players in this disaster, not just the EU and USA. There are reasonable muslims, but you seem to be saying that, or implying that muslims anywhere will push for their religion to be implemented as law and such, or will cause trouble just because they are muslim and everyone else isn't. It's also called sticking with out allies. THAT has a serious consequence if you abandon your allies for convenience reasons,. Which is what you're suggesting. There's no real reason Russia and/or China would ally militarily with the US. They've seem us as enemies for far too long. Not only militarily, but economically and politically. Allying with them would mean the US would have to sacrifice economic and political influence with them. With China.. well, there goes Taiwan and the South China Sea, increased Chinese influence in the nations around SCS and definitely in the Gulf of Mexico and South America and Africa. We'd have to give Russia free rein in their doings too. If Russia could guarantee the US wouldn't respond, you'd see a huge uptick in their activity in the countries that border them, especially in the Baltic States and probably parts of Poland. If we allied with them, we'd have to let them do much of what they want, otherwise why would they trust us? Would be get access to their markets or would they keep them separate? Would there be technology sharing both ways? Would they have us stand aside and do nothing while they invade and occupy entire areas? Your entire premise seems to be 'Russia and/or China fight muslim extremists so we should dump our allies of 60+ years and join with them'. Doing that would seriously hurt US prestige and kill much of the economy from the backlash in Europe. It would also say to the world we cannot be trusted to be a good ally since we'd dump them for a possible benefit, and you really haven't laid out any good benefits in dropping our alliance with Europe other than vague insinuations and highly suspect reasoning to join nations that hate/seriously distrust us. |
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Zakharra
Posts: 619
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Open military involvement? No. I'm not for that. But we could offer tactical and strategic support, as well as some intelligence assets. Europe can do the same. But this isn't the basis of dropping a 70+ year alliance we've had with Europe like nameless wants, to join old adversaries. |
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PeterZ
Posts: 6432
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Dropping an alliance? More like saying if you want to fight the Russians, go ahead and do it alone. More conservative Americans will support tactical and strategic assistance. Liberals? I doubt it. Half the liberarians will support each party. No great consensus on this issue. I tend to agree with Nameless that America needs to stop being the policement of the world. After WWII that 70++ year alliance means America contributes the lion's share of lives and treasure. Quite often those lives and that treasure was spent on primarily US interests. Enough nations are angry at US interventionism for that reason. Let's give others a chance to take care of these sorts of issues, eh? |
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Arol
Posts: 476
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Got a cold winter coming up is my guess, with Putin’s hand on the gas valves. See if Europe is ready to face a recession? Some of us still remember what happened back in ‘73 when OPEC sent the world into recession with their Embargo. |
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Daryl
Posts: 3607
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Has anyone noticed that there was a sudden change? Short sharp fire fight at the train station, train leaves, and since then the local thugs have been more cooperative. Perhaps Putin got sick of losing face and sent his equivalent of the SAS in to have a brief chat with the locals?
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namelessfly
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It seems that the separatists and Putin are not backing down. They just bagged two more Ukrainian fighter jets.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/07/23 ... n-ukraine/ I suspect that Putin has encouraged his proxies to be a bit more discriminating. |
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namelessfly
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Amen!!!
Having Russia become a major oil and gas supplier to Europe was a great strategy to resolve problems with Russia and the Middle East. However; it gives Russia perhaps too much leverage. Governor Palin recently gave an interview in which she stated that the US increasing oil, gas and coal production enables the US to supply energy Europe and other allies in the event of a crisis which reduces the leverage of Russia as well as other OPEC countries. Even if the US is not a net exporter, if the US imports less that frees up more resources for Europe. With global cooling coming on, the risk of Putin cutting off the gas to Europe raises the spectre of death on a scale that dwarfs the shoot down. BTW, did anyone notice that prior to the coup, Russia continued to ship gas to Ukraine even though Ukraine was not paying it's bills? Ukraine was exploiting it's position as a gas conduit to Western Europe to extort free gas from Russia. Much of this dispute is motivated by Russia building alternative pipelines to bypass the freeloaders of Ukraine.
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