I'm betting that the vast majority of Ukrainians blame putin for the death and destruction.
Jelly has better connections there than BDKKKaren or SeattleGolum. What's his perspective?
I'm betting that the vast majority of Ukrainians blame putin for the death and destruction.
Wasn't the reason, was the justification.Skjellyfetti wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 7:32 am Even Putin in his 2.5 hour monologue with Tucker didn't claim that as the reason for the invasion.
Did you see the NY Times article on the CIA in Ukraine? Don't act like this is a one way street.GannonFan wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 7:29 amRussia and Russian supported units have been in Ukraine, and the Donbass, for at least as long as 2014, if not longer, but you keep with that narrative that they're just there for "protection".SeattleGriz wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 8:33 pm
No, he was asked by the Donbass for protection, but you keep with that narrative. It was either that, or Ukraine, which had massed at the border, was going to invade the Donbass and kill more of their brethren.![]()
NATO treated Putin and his concerns with little regard and now he’s got a huge chip on his shoulder that looks like a nuclear warhead…. He won’t lose his war in UkraineSeattleGriz wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 8:15 pmWasn't the reason, was the justification.Skjellyfetti wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 7:32 am Even Putin in his 2.5 hour monologue with Tucker didn't claim that as the reason for the invasion.
SeattleGriz wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 8:15 pmWasn't the reason, was the justification.Skjellyfetti wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 7:32 am Even Putin in his 2.5 hour monologue with Tucker didn't claim that as the reason for the invasion.
Reason is part of the definition of justification. Justification is a synonym for reason.justification (noun)
jus·ti·fi·ca·tion
Synonyms of justification
1
a: the act or an instance of justifying something : VINDICATION
arguments offered in justification of their choice
b: an acceptable reason for doing something : something that justifies an act or way of behaving
could provide no justification for his decision
2: the act, process, or state of being justified by God (see JUSTIFY sense 2a)
3: the process or result of justifying lines of text (see JUSTIFY sense 3a)
software that provides automatic justification of text
Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 9:10 pmNATO treated Putin and his concerns with little regard and now he’s got a huge chip on his shoulder that looks like a nuclear warhead…. He won’t lose his war in Ukraine
Joey Rotten obviously wants this war… what a mess the whole thing is and all because of ego and emotions
UNI88 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 8:27 amThe guy who works at Boeing probably shouldn't be taking these kinds of shots at someone.SeattleGriz wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 6:52 pm Ding dong, CIDs boss is dead. Piece of shit neocons responsible for the destruction of Ukraine steps down like a rat off a sinking ship.
What about Finland?Skjellyfetti wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 5:18 pm Congratulations to Sweden for joining NATO.
Without Putin stepping on his dick, NATO was headed towards irrelevancy. Now, it's stronger and more unified than it has been in decades. Takes shrewd diplomacy to reverse hundreds of years of Swedish neutrality.
They joined in April 2023.Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 5:37 pmWhat about Finland?Skjellyfetti wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 5:18 pm Congratulations to Sweden for joining NATO.
Without Putin stepping on his dick, NATO was headed towards irrelevancy. Now, it's stronger and more unified than it has been in decades. Takes shrewd diplomacy to reverse hundreds of years of Swedish neutrality.
Yes I know … google is my friend
Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 6:33 pmSo when are we going to beat him and end this stupid war?
Yep.SeattleGriz wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 5:45 amCaribbean Hen wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 6:33 pm
So when are we going to beat him and end this stupid war?This has been great. Got the stooges sputtering because they keep asking stupid questions.
At least half the world and all of Europe are “stooges” …he said while he plants his Russian flag on the wrong side of history.SeattleGriz wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 5:45 amCaribbean Hen wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 6:33 pm
So when are we going to beat him and end this stupid war?This has been great. Got the stooges sputtering because they can't answer basic questions.
ExactlySeattleGriz wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 5:45 amCaribbean Hen wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 6:33 pm
So when are we going to beat him and end this stupid war?This has been great. Got the stooges sputtering because they can't answer basic questions.
Continue to help UKR reject Russian advances and secure their sovereignty until Russia finally gives up. Either send additional aid and/or weapons to UKR or start using frozen Russian assets (economically risky but do U.S. war).Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 7:23 amExactlySeattleGriz wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 5:45 am
This has been great. Got the stooges sputtering because they can't answer basic questions.
These guys are all talk and no answers …
When Trump gives that creepy little sock puppet in the Speaker's chair the OK?Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2024 6:33 pmSo when are we going to beat him and end this stupid war?
CH has a little bit of a point here, and that point being how long does this go on? A year? 5 years? 10 years?Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:16 am
Can you post the Well we’re waiting gif for me ..
Seriously, what you’re really saying results in a stalemate and Putin can continue with your approach as long as it takes. He’s just not going to give up. The ugly truth is to break the tie, somebody needs to up their game and it will be ugly. A shame a resolution couldn’t have been agreed too and nobody is even even trying
“There are no solutions, only trade offs”GannonFan wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:28 amCH has a little bit of a point here, and that point being how long does this go on? A year? 5 years? 10 years?Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:16 am
Can you post the Well we’re waiting gif for me ..
Seriously, what you’re really saying results in a stalemate and Putin can continue with your approach as long as it takes. He’s just not going to give up. The ugly truth is to break the tie, somebody needs to up their game and it will be ugly. A shame a resolution couldn’t have been agreed too and nobody is even even trying
In two years, we've given Ukraine about $75B in aid, spread out over everything from actual hardware to financing. That's only a relatively small amount of our annual outlays (maybe 0.3%). It is big considering our annual military budget (about 9% of our annual budget there), so we do need to consider this versus funding our own military.
So it's a question of where all this is leading. Can we continue this for another 3-5 years? I don't see a military solution coming anytime soon here. And I agree, letting Putin have any of Ukraine is not a viable solution either (see how we let him have Crimea 8 years ago without really pushing back). I don't have the answers, but we need to find one.
I agree there are no easy or convenient outcomes on the near horizon.GannonFan wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:28 amCH has a little bit of a point here, and that point being how long does this go on? A year? 5 years? 10 years?Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:16 am
Can you post the Well we’re waiting gif for me ..
Seriously, what you’re really saying results in a stalemate and Putin can continue with your approach as long as it takes. He’s just not going to give up. The ugly truth is to break the tie, somebody needs to up their game and it will be ugly. A shame a resolution couldn’t have been agreed too and nobody is even even trying
In two years, we've given Ukraine about $75B in aid, spread out over everything from actual hardware to financing. That's only a relatively small amount of our annual outlays (maybe 0.3%). It is big considering our annual military budget (about 9% of our annual budget there), so we do need to consider this versus funding our own military.
So it's a question of where all this is leading. Can we continue this for another 3-5 years? I don't see a military solution coming anytime soon here. And I agree, letting Putin have any of Ukraine is not a viable solution either (see how we let him have Crimea 8 years ago without really pushing back). I don't have the answers, but we need to find one.
Those conflicts also settled into long term with US boots on the ground. I think there needs to be legitimate talk about bringing what's left of Ukraine and giving them NATO protection. Maybe that means we have them give up Crimea and what they don't have in the east of Ukraine right now, but that would at least draw a very firm line of how far Putin can take this. Staying the path we're on now and it could be years down the road and all of Ukraine falls. Bring Ukraine into NATO, draw the line of where NATO protection exists, put NATO boots on the ground there and yes, it's a smaller Ukraine than when this happened, but I don't see Putin daring to hit NATO. Yes, that means NATO is there for a very long time, but that's better, IMO, than some uncertain do we fund them or not that we're in now. Question is can Biden do this now or would he wait until after the election.kalm wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 9:19 amI agree there are no easy or convenient outcomes on the near horizon.GannonFan wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:28 am
CH has a little bit of a point here, and that point being how long does this go on? A year? 5 years? 10 years?
In two years, we've given Ukraine about $75B in aid, spread out over everything from actual hardware to financing. That's only a relatively small amount of our annual outlays (maybe 0.3%). It is big considering our annual military budget (about 9% of our annual budget there), so we do need to consider this versus funding our own military.
So it's a question of where all this is leading. Can we continue this for another 3-5 years? I don't see a military solution coming anytime soon here. And I agree, letting Putin have any of Ukraine is not a viable solution either (see how we let him have Crimea 8 years ago without really pushing back). I don't have the answers, but we need to find one.
“We” needs to continue including all of NATO.
Many conflicts settle into long term stalemates (from the Koreas to the ME. I’m just not personally ready for ready us to write “Dear Ukraine. We tried, but it’s just taking too long and getting expensive.”
CH has a point but I think he and SG oversimplify things in their rush to suck up to trump through putin. They oversimplify things and assume that:GannonFan wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:28 amCH has a little bit of a point here, and that point being how long does this go on? A year? 5 years? 10 years?Caribbean Hen wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:16 am
Can you post the Well we’re waiting gif for me ..
Seriously, what you’re really saying results in a stalemate and Putin can continue with your approach as long as it takes. He’s just not going to give up. The ugly truth is to break the tie, somebody needs to up their game and it will be ugly. A shame a resolution couldn’t have been agreed too and nobody is even even trying
In two years, we've given Ukraine about $75B in aid, spread out over everything from actual hardware to financing. That's only a relatively small amount of our annual outlays (maybe 0.3%). It is big considering our annual military budget (about 9% of our annual budget there), so we do need to consider this versus funding our own military.
So it's a question of where all this is leading. Can we continue this for another 3-5 years? I don't see a military solution coming anytime soon here. And I agree, letting Putin have any of Ukraine is not a viable solution either (see how we let him have Crimea 8 years ago without really pushing back). I don't have the answers, but we need to find one.
Nice Keith Richards referenceSkjellyfetti wrote: ↑Fri Mar 08, 2024 2:22 pm I agree that the "long-term plan" is difficult at the moment. I think it hinges on a few things that we don't know. And, this is mostly just my speculation.
1. The US election in November. This is the most crucial one.
- Trump wins - I think it's game over for Ukraine.
- Biden wins and Democrats don't control the House - I think a NATO backed armistice line is a very likely possibility.
2. How much longer Putin lives. This is really a wild card. He may outlive Keith Richards for all we know. But, Putin has no heir apparent. He has been too paranoid to give anyone that status. When he dies - Russia is going to descend into chaos. It's really hard to imagine the next President of Russia coming to power in any way but a brutal power struggle. IMO this is going to be ugly when it happens and the logistics and coherence of the army is going to fall apart. Depending on how much Russia takes and digs in before this happens - Ukraine would have a chance to seize a lot of it back.
- Biden wins and Democrats control Congress - aid resumes for at least 2 years and Ukraine has another chance at a counteroffensive.