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Russia invading Ukraine (NEWS/UPDATES)

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It'll be interesting to see how meaningful the West's move away from reliance on Russian oil and gas is now. The problem with really tough sanctions - especially for the EU - is that the various countries have different levels of economic reliance on Russian energy sources. Germany may well rattle it's antique sabre, but I can't see them actually following through with a cancellation of the Nord Stream 2 project long-term, for example. It would hurt them too much. I really hope that the EU is able to reach unanimity on a sanctions package that will really hurt, but that's going to be politically difficult.

The only sensible way to contain Russian lunacy is by hobbling it economically. To do that meaningfully the West needs to insulate itself from economic blow-back. Weaning Europe off Russian energy is absolutely key.
 
Again, where is the proof that he will go for more countries? There isn’t any. He’s been explicit in his reasons for wanting Ukraine, he’s wanted it for years, this has been playing out for years.

If we stand up to aggression like you claim we should, where does that end? How far does ‘standing up’ go when there’s a nuclear option? Do the people standing up to him back down at the last minute possibly giving him even more power than he could ever have dreamt of? Sometimes, and some people really struggle with this, it’s safer and wiser to accept a defeat and walk away, as awful as it is given the situation

Would you “accept defeat” if a hostile, nuclear power successfully invaded the UK, and the Americans decided not to get involved?

Hypothetical scenario. Just wondering what your threshold for action is.
 
I am deeply worried.

1. Russian nuclear use doctrine. Authorised (not that means anything at min) if "territory of Russia is threatened even by conventional force". He declares eg. Estonia as really part of wider Russia, he's taken on there & he declares that Russian land is threatened.

2. I've always had an interest in Putin & he's changed. He looks different & acts different. He had happy support of his cabinet & now they are terrified of him. Something is very much not right. He's 70 & I wonder if he is ill, or whether alleged 2 years of isolation have made him go a bit north Korea.

I think an internal "wtf is he doing" internal Russian action is only way out of this past a large confrontation.
Put pressure on the Russian people to oust him
Switch their cashpoints off (it can be done), stop all trade with the russians, stop all russian flights to the civilised world, stop all russian shipping from docking in the civilised world.

Turn the screw
 
There has been for years prior to this man. This war has been going on for years. Do people really think all of this has just happened in the last few weeks?
It has surprised me how many people have thought just that. Someone at work asked me to explain the situation a couple of weeks ago as they had no idea.

As someone who has basically read about the war on a weekly basis for seven years in the more intellectual media (FT, Economist, etc) I struggle to imagine what it must be like in the minds of people who don’t follow proper news.
 
Interesting take from someone who knows what they are talking about

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I know they are seen as the big bad army but if you look at their military spending as a nation, I would be surprised if they had the money to modernise a very large army, spend money on stationing troops out of bases for a long time, launch an attack on and then hold a country like Ukraine. It just doesnt add up.

 
Again, where is the proof that he will go for more countries? There isn’t any. He’s been explicit in his reasons for wanting Ukraine, he’s wanted it for years, this has been playing out for years.

If we stand up to aggression like you claim we should, where does that end? How far does ‘standing up’ go when there’s a nuclear option? Do the people standing up to him back down at the last minute possibly giving him even more power than he could ever have dreamt of? Sometimes, and some people really struggle with this, it’s safer and wiser to accept a defeat and walk away, as awful as it is given the situation
You’ll never get “proof” until it’s too late. He’s not going to broadcast his intentions to have the rest of the world stop him.

Do we just let him do what he wants until he dies? There’s a line to be drawn somewhere and history has taught us that the sooner that’s done the better.
 
Would you “accept defeat” if a hostile, nuclear power successfully invaded the UK, and the Americans decided not to get involved?

Hypothetical scenario. Just wondering what your threshold for action is.
The Americans would have to. Its the most basic principal of nato and has been since 1949.
 
I am deeply worried.

1. Russian nuclear use doctrine. Authorised (not that means anything at min) if "territory of Russia is threatened even by conventional force". He declares eg. Estonia as really part of wider Russia, he's taken on there & he declares that Russian land is threatened.

2. I've always had an interest in Putin & he's changed. He looks different & acts different. He had happy support of his cabinet & now they are terrified of him. Something is very much not right. He's 70 & I wonder if he is ill, or whether alleged 2 years of isolation have made him go a bit north Korea.

I think an internal "wtf is he doing" internal Russian action is only way out of this past a large confrontation.
I saw something that suggested he may be suffering from covid-induced paranoia. With his age that could be true, or he could be in mental decline due to other age-related factors. When he was addressing his ministers on live TV some of them looked surprisingly disturbed by the nature of his speech.
 
Beware applying Godwins law. It has been used to justify every disastrous foreign intervention such as Suez, Iraq, Afghanistan.

All unmitigated disasters.

I asked this here. Did you reply? Apols if I missed it. Very active thread.

I never said he was. You said we shouldn’t take action because that risks nuclear war. So I was asking what your threshold is for action.

Would you send troops if it was Estonia?
 
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I know they are seen as the big bad army but if you look at their military spending as a nation, I would be surprised if they had the money to modernise a very large army, spend money on stationing troops out of bases for a long time, launch an attack on and then hold a country like Ukraine. It just doesnt add up.

The lad on the left can't be more than 16
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It'll be interesting to see how meaningful the West's move away from reliance on Russian oil and gas is now. The problem with really tough sanctions - especially for the EU - is that the various countries have different levels of economic reliance on Russian energy sources. Germany may well rattle it's antique sabre, but I can't see them actually following through with a cancellation of the Nord Stream 2 project long-term, for example. It would hurt them too much. I really hope that the EU is able to reach unanimity on a sanctions package that will really hurt, but that's going to be politically difficult.

The only sensible way to contain Russian lunacy is by hobbling it economically. To do that meaningfully the West needs to insulate itself from economic blow-back. Weaning Europe off Russian energy is absolutely key.
I’m not sure how well we’d be able to disrupt their economy. China has already picked a side and I’d be amazed if Putin hasn’t already calculated the economic risk involved. He won’t have expected us to do absolutely nothing.
 
Would you “accept defeat” if a hostile, nuclear power successfully invaded the UK, and the Americans decided not to get involved?

Hypothetical scenario. Just wondering what your threshold for action is.
Not comparable. We are founder members of NATO, therefor the US would be compelled to assist if called on, as would the rest of NATO.
 
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