Ukraine
#1
Posted 2022-March-02, 09:09
I'm posting this because I have a very conflicted position on what we should do next.
Every instinct of mine says that we should stand up to Putin in any way possible short of putting troops on the ground in Ukraine. If that involves no fly zones and hitting Russian troops from the air so be it, but it's been well explained why this is problematic, and why western leaders are not doing this.
The conflicting factor for me is what's happening to ordinary poor Russians, and many will die there.
I have a friend (34F, no friend of Putin) living on the outskirts of Moscow. After bills, she lived on about $2 a day. This was just about enough, but now energy prices are going through the roof, and staples like buckwheat have gone up by a third pretty much overnight. Next winter if not before she will starve, particularly if Russia is cut off from money transfers.
I'm now looking at if there's any legitimate way of getting her out of Russia, and struggling with how/where to start with the UK immigration process.
#2
Posted 2022-March-02, 09:46
1. It means shooting down Russian planes that are operating over Ukraine
2. It also requires suppressing Russian air defense assets (because you don't want the Russians shooting down NATO jets)
Enforcing a no fly zone means a hot war between NATO and Russia
#3
Posted 2022-March-02, 09:47
Cyberyeti, on 2022-March-02, 09:09, said:
Amazing how positions about immigration are changing.
#4
Posted 2022-March-02, 09:59
hrothgar, on 2022-March-02, 09:46, said:
1. It means shooting down Russian planes that are operating over Ukraine
2. It also requires suppressing Russian air defense assets (because you don't want the Russians shooting down NATO jets)
Enforcing a no fly zone means a hot war between NATO and Russia
And 2 is the real problem, because some of those Russian air defence assets are INSIDE Russia.
#5
Posted 2022-March-02, 10:03
hrothgar, on 2022-March-02, 09:47, said:
She may have a valid asylum claim, she runs a suicide prevention site and telling a suicidal teen "it's OK to be gay" breaks Russia's anti-gay laws and some people apparently have been prosecuted for that. I just don't have the knowledge.
#6
Posted 2022-March-02, 10:19
What I am really hoping to see come out of this are concerted efforts to isolate Europe from the Russian energy markets. Seeing the German's talking about starting up the nuclear programs once again is a great first step.
Can't make up my mind what I would think about NATO expansion into Sweden and Finland.
#7
Posted 2022-March-02, 10:30
hrothgar, on 2022-March-02, 10:19, said:
What I am really hoping to see come out of this are concerted efforts to isolate Europe from the Russian energy markets. Seeing the German's talking about starting up the nuclear programs once again is a great first step.
Can't make up my mind what I would think about NATO expansion into Sweden and Finland.
My worry in the short term is that Russia feels it's all taking too long and starts flattening Kyiv or using illegal munitions, at which point the west may get dragged into something horrible.
#8
Posted 2022-March-02, 10:36
Cyberyeti, on 2022-March-02, 10:30, said:
The Russians are already using cluster bombs on civilian targets.
I doubt that this will cause the West to take direct action.
(It won't bring anyone back to life)
This is a marathon, not a sprint.
#10
Posted 2022-March-02, 11:04
Quote
Some entire Russian units have laid down their arms without a fight after confronting a surprisingly stiff Ukrainian defense, the official said. A significant number of the Russian troops are young conscripts who are poorly trained and ill-prepared for the all-out assault. And in some cases, Russian troops have deliberately punched holes in their vehicles' gas tanks, presumably to avoid combat, the official said.
#11
Posted 2022-March-02, 12:36
hrothgar, on 2022-March-02, 09:46, said:
1. It means shooting down Russian planes that are operating over Ukraine
2. It also requires suppressing Russian air defense assets (because you don't want the Russians shooting down NATO jets)
Enforcing a no fly zone means a hot war between NATO and Russia
Would your position about NATO involvement be different if Ukraine had the same energy reserves as Russia? Should oil/gas really be the main consideration when it comes to defending democracy?
Cyberyeti, on 2022-March-02, 09:59, said:
2 is not the problem as the advocates of a NFZ tend to be for enforcing it only over the Western portion of the country precisely for this reason. The main issue is as hrothgar lays out, that it means a direct hot air war between NATO and Russia.
#12
Posted 2022-March-02, 13:25
Gilithin, on 2022-March-02, 12:36, said:
While Ukraine doesn't have that, it does have some VERY serious mineral assets
Quote
I thought the radar, which you normally take out for a no fly zone was in Russia for the whole country.
#13
Posted 2022-March-02, 14:36
These last few days have brought the realization that basically, in this area, I know nothing.
#14
Posted 2022-March-02, 15:51
The lecture from 2015 is extraordinarily prescient.
He points out that the insistence by the USA at a meeting in Bucharest in 2008 that Ukraine and Georgia should become NATO members is the root cause of this conflict.
#15
Posted 2022-March-02, 16:27
#16
Posted 2022-March-03, 11:25
pilowsky, on 2022-March-02, 15:51, said:
The lecture from 2015 is extraordinarily prescient.
He points out that the insistence by the USA at a meeting in Bucharest in 2008 that Ukraine and Georgia should become NATO members is the root cause of this conflict.
So nothing to do with Putin copying Hitler's playbook for nibbling at territory? He knows NATO in Europe is a defensive alliance and there's no way a 30-country alliance would launch an attack on Russia (as opposed to defend its members against attack).
But if you were a small country bordering Russia, would you (a) think let's join Nato now before we're attacked, or (b) I'll sit here and hope for the best, that Mr Putin seems like a decent chap.
#17
Posted 2022-March-03, 12:04
Wish that I could comment on the various stuff that is going on.
#18
Posted 2022-March-04, 10:22
pilowsky, on 2022-March-02, 15:51, said:
The lecture from 2015 is extraordinarily prescient.
He points out that the insistence by the USA at a meeting in Bucharest in 2008 that Ukraine and Georgia should become NATO members is the root cause of this conflict.
I dont think this goes far enough. Putin in not threatened by NATO on his doorstep but by democracy surrounding him. Without the ability to gaslight his own people, the dictator is only a thug in constant fear of being overthrown.
#19
Posted 2022-March-04, 10:44
Quote
#20
Posted 2022-March-04, 13:24
Gilithin, on 2022-March-02, 12:36, said:
No, easy decision. You don't enforce a no-fly-zone if it means opening a logical path to escalation to a nuclear WW 3.