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Thread: Ukraine: military (Aug '14 to mid-June '15) closed

  1. #61
    Council Member Dayuhan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    The sentence tells me he thought he was going to win across the board on both the Crimea and eastern Ukraine and now he has no Plan B.
    I don't think anyone here knows with any certainty what Putin thought or thinks, or what his plans are. Speculation on the subject may be entertaining, but it's still speculative.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    The only thing and JMA will agree one can accuse the EU/NATO/US is they were asleep at the wheel in the Crimea nor do they have a plan now if Russian invades under the guise of "peacekeeping".
    We don't know what plans the EU/NATO/US have. It's reasonable to assume that the fairly obvious possibility of invasion under the guise of peacekeeping has been discussed, but we have no way of knowing what the planned response would be. It's obviously not something that will be advertised.

    Invasion under the guise of peacekeeping could of course be preempted if the Ukrainians isolate the remaining separatists, then offer them some sort of deal that will allow the Russians to go home and the bulk of the indigenous soldiery some kind of amnesty. That would not make the Ukrainians happy, but backing the separatists into a corner and trying to exterminate them would provide a strong pretext for intervention. Ultimately that's a decision that has to be made by the Ukrainians, not the US or the EU.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    So if that happens will you finally stop and rethink everything you have previously stated and redefine your thinking concerning "rouge" states.
    Rogue. Please.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    By the way Russia is asking the UNSC today for an emergency meeting---here comes the "peacekeeping" invasion ---if the UN does not act then Russia will state that it will.
    We'll see.
    “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary”

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    Dayuhan---rouge yes if the following comment is valid---when Russia annexed the Crimea they used the NATO/US response to both Kosovo and Libya as examples of no UN cover and the West running amok --so they will use the same argument hey the UN did not go along with us and we now will use exactly the same arguments the West used before when they did not use the UNSC--Russia tends to forget that in both countries there had been an ongoing irregular fight that Russia blocked all UN actions on.

    They have been false flagging it over the last two weeks and have been called on it---their response---hey ain't us- it is the Ukrainians---they went rouge on the KAL downed flight just as they did on MH17---both times arguing it ain't us.

    Russia has a track record of abusing the term 'peacekeeping' as a cover for unlawful military intervention and occupation," the official said. "Given its unlawful attempted annexation of Crimea, which we do not recognize, it is deeply troubling to hear any discussion of Russian 'peacekeepers' in Ukrainian territory. Such statements are destabilizing and unhelpful."

    Dayuhan--here is the problem Russia/Putin are having---they want an urgent UNSC meeting on humanitarian reasons in the Ukraine and quote they ar in contact to the ICRC about the problem with the Ukrainians terrorizing proRussians in Donetsk.

    THEN along comes their own irregulars and captures three ICRC reps and their drivers and the DNR actual Russian leader Girkin in a voice intercept says thrown them in a hole--check the link for the voice intercept.

    Seems like Putin cannot control the ghosts he called up.

    http://euromaidanpress.com/2014/08/0...presentatives/
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 08-06-2014 at 02:49 PM.

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    AP---so who is actually smoking dope in Moscow these days--Putin or his Defense Ministry?

    And you really want to convince me they are not a rouge state? Well maybe not a rouge state but evidently in an alternated state of reality which is far more dangerous as then they do not fully understand the reality of their problems and that is dangerous especially if they control nuclear weapons.

    Again another example of the "ain't me complex".

    From Interfax today:

    17:19 CLAIMS BY PENTAGON, NATO ABOUT RUSSIA BUILDING UP MILITARY PRESENCE ALONG BORDER WITH UKRAINE ARE BASELESS - RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY

    This was the expanded Interfax press release:

    August 06, 2014 17:33


    Pentagon, NATO make baseless claims about Russia increasing military presence along border with Ukraine - ministry


    MOSCOW. Aug 6 (Interfax-AVN) - Allegations by Pentagon and NATO officials about the continuing build-up of the Russian military presence along the border with Ukraine are misleading the global community, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

    "Such claims can only make the Russian Defense Ministry sympathize with Pentagon, State Department and NATO spokespersons. They seem to be serious people who constantly have to improvise in their speeches in order to lend some seriousness to their claims," spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov told journalists on Wednesday.

    "Regular escapades about Russia pulling its troops towards the border with Ukraine are reminiscent of a soap-bubble sale auction where the most important thing is to ask the highest price before the bubble bursts," he said.

    "Apparently, this is why there are such big discrepancies in figures cited in statements about the alleged 'massing' of Russian troops," the general said.


    So AP NATO/US is wrong about the Russian buildup but somehow someone in Moscow forgot to tell the Germans who are picking the buildup with their intelligence services and are highly concerned of a possible "peacekeeping" invasion.

    http://www.spiegel.de/politik/auslan...-a-984774.html

    And somehow someone in Russia ie Putin and the RF MoD does not believe all those NATO/US AWACs flying around using the GMTI sensors are not seeing the buildup as well.

    And Russia is not a rouge state come on AP---you never did accept or eject the Wikipedia definition of a rouge state did you as a common ground for this debate.
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 08-06-2014 at 03:21 PM.

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    Council Member AmericanPride's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by outlaw
    Dayuhan---rouge yes if the following comment is valid---when Russia annexed the Crimea they used the NATO/US response to both Kosovo and Libya as examples of no UN cover and the West running amok
    So, Russia is a rogue country for following the example set forth by other states? Isn't that fundamentally the opposite of going rogue?

    Quote Originally Posted by outlaw
    Well maybe not a rouge state but evidently in an alternated state of reality which is far more dangerous as then they do not fully understand the reality of their problems and that is dangerous especially if they control nuclear weapons.
    That could describe most governments in many fluid, high-stakes environments (i.e. Bush administration during the Iraq War). So even if this point is granted, how does it make Russia uniquely despicable?

    Quote Originally Posted by Outlaw
    So AP NATO/US is wrong about the Russian buildup but somehow someone in Moscow forgot to tell the Germans who are picking the buildup with their intelligence services and are highly concerned of a possible "peacekeeping" invasion.
    Again - on the one hand, you are dismissing Russian information operations as delibarate propaganda, and then on the other, you are claiming that the same propaganda is evidence that Russia's leadership is detached from reality. Of course propaganda is detached from reality - that's the point of propaganda!

    Quote Originally Posted by Outlaw
    And Russia is not a rouge state come on AP---you never did accept or eject the Wikipedia definition of a rouge state did you as a common ground for this debate.
    See my post dated 31 July.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dayuhan
    Invasion under the guise of peacekeeping could of course be preempted if the Ukrainians isolate the remaining separatists, then offer them some sort of deal that will allow the Russians to go home and the bulk of the indigenous soldiery some kind of amnesty. That would not make the Ukrainians happy, but backing the separatists into a corner and trying to exterminate them would provide a strong pretext for intervention. Ultimately that's a decision that has to be made by the Ukrainians, not the US or the EU.
    +1

    And that's the fundamental problem coursing through this thread; there's a dissonance between the idea that Russia is a third-rate country that can be pushed around and that Russia a major threat to U.S. security. So there's advocacy for aggressive, punitive policies ("emasculation" in the words of JMA) without an honest assessment of how Russia, given its capabilities, will respond.

    When faced with unconditional surrender or with ultimatums, how do states respond? The answer to that question depends on that state's perception of its relative strength compared to its adversaries.
    When I am weaker than you, I ask you for freedom because that is according to your principles; when I am stronger than you, I take away your freedom because that is according to my principles. - Louis Veuillot

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    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    And that's the fundamental problem coursing through this thread; there's a dissonance between the idea that Russia is a third-rate country that can be pushed around and that Russia a major threat to U.S. security. So there's advocacy for aggressive, punitive policies ("emasculation" in the words of JMA) without an honest assessment of how Russia, given its capabilities, will respond.
    Nah AP, you are way out in left field again.

    The problem with this thread is that Outlaw is making the running and offering his take on the situation given the facts (and his career experience) at his disposal... and there are a few Obama apologists chirping from the bleachers.

    What is clear is that Russia would not have attempted what they have - in annexing Crimea and invading eastern Ukraine - unless they were sure they would get away with it. Putin correctly assessed the US ability to influence the EU to the extent of presenting a unified front against the aggressor is a thing of the past. He also correctly understands that the greatest fear in the US is of Russian nukes.

    While the incremental sanctions may be having some effect as they are increased they are a day late and a dollar short in preventing the annexation of Crimea and the invasion of eastern Ukraine (and the shooting down of a commercial airliner). That I suggest how the reaction to Russian actions should be assessed. Will they lead to the restoration of the pre-invasion status quo with appropriate reparations?

    Once this has been achieved steps should be talken to ensure Russia is in no position to repeat this terriorial aggression ever again.

    When faced with unconditional surrender or with ultimatums, how do states respond? The answer to that question depends on that state's perception of its relative strength compared to its adversaries.
    Who said anything about "unconditional surrender or with ultimatums"? You are making this up as you go along aren't you.
    Last edited by JMA; 08-06-2014 at 08:11 PM.

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    Council Member slapout9's Avatar
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    Default The Continued Decline Of The USA

    This thread is Good example of why Mitt Romney is becoming so popular again. He had and has an excellent grasp of economic and worlds affairs. This competent and accurate world view is completely lacking in the current administration, which seems happy with the continued decline of US power and prestige.

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    And that's the fundamental problem coursing through this thread; there's a dissonance between the idea that Russia is a third-rate country that can be pushed around and that Russia a major threat to U.S. security.

    See AP you use the term third rate when I use the term second rate "developing" country offering nothing more than two raw resources.

    A superpower that can only respond to the EU/US sanctions with what a "blockade of US fruits, grains, vegetables" is what a "superpower"---did you know that after that announcement was made food prices for the "common Russian" jumped 45% in one day---wow what a superpower as Putin stated the day before his "sanctions" were not going to hit the common man in the street---guess what another of his many lies these past five months. Really AP if you believe what is coming out of Moscow and Putin then I can probably sell you prime real estate ie a vineyard in the Crimea.

    See AP a rouge country having and threatening the use of nuclear weapons and yes in the early stages of the Crimea nuclear threats were in fact issued by members of the Duma

    ---I call that rouge my friend regardless of how you define it.
    Last edited by davidbfpo; 08-12-2014 at 06:49 PM. Reason: Edited slightly or completly by Moderator to enable thread to be reopened

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    Council Member Dayuhan's Avatar
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    This seems a strange and self-defeating move, if true, simply because it hurts a lot more people in Russia than outside of it. The last thing most governments would want to sanction is their own imports of cheap food. People will overlook many things in the grip of nationalism, but the stomach is pretty close to home.

    https://ph.news.yahoo.com/russia-ban...231321612.html

    Russia bans all U.S. food, EU fruit and veg in sanctions response; NATO fears invasion

    MOSCOW/DONETSK Ukraine (Reuters) - Russia will ban all imports of food from the United States and all fruit and vegetables from Europe, the state news agency reported on Wednesday, a sweeping response to Western sanctions imposed over its support for rebels in Ukraine.

    The measures will hit consumers at home who rely on cheap imports, and on farmers in the West for whom Russia is a big market. Moscow is by far the biggest buyer of European fruit and vegetables and the second biggest importer of U.S. poultry....

    ... U.S. poultry has been ubiquitous in Russia since the early days after the Soviet Union, when cheap American chicken quarters sold at street markets were called "Bush's legs" after the president.
    On the invasion side, I'm starting to wonder about the point at which it might be advisable for the Ukraine to call a pause, offer a safe return for Russian fighters and a limited amnesty for local rebels, and even offer a degree of local autonomy... obviously not the kind of autonomy Putin wants, with the east having veto power over foreign policy and other features that would give Russia control, but a substantial carrot. Offering Russian Ukrainians the kind of linguistic and cultural recognition that the French enjoy in eastern Canada might be a start, and could be managed without seriously compromising Ukrainian sovereignty.

    The idea is not to give in, of course, but to offer enough of a carrot to undercut any Russian contention that peacekeeping forces are necessary. Obviously this is not a move that the US or the EU can take, the Ukrainians have to be on board and up front.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Dayuhan---rouge yes if the following comment is valid---when Russia annexed the Crimea they used the NATO/US response to both Kosovo and Libya as examples of no UN cover and the West running amok --so they will use the same argument hey the UN did not go along with us and we now will use exactly the same arguments the West used before when they did not use the UNSC--Russia tends to forget that in both countries there had been an ongoing irregular fight that Russia blocked all UN actions on.
    If selective interpretation if rules and precedents makes a rogue state, there's a lot of rogue states out there.

    I don't see how terms like "rogue" (still less "rouge") are really very useful. Does the term get us any closer to a strategy to get the Russians to stop doing what they're doing?

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Dayuhan--here is the problem Russia/Putin are having---they want an urgent UNSC meeting on humanitarian reasons in the Ukraine and quote they ar in contact to the ICRC about the problem with the Ukrainians terrorizing proRussians in Donetsk.

    THEN along comes their own irregulars and captures three ICRC reps and their drivers and the DNR actual Russian leader Girkin in a voice intercept says thrown them in a hole--check the link for the voice intercept.

    Seems like Putin cannot control the ghosts he called up.
    Yes, we see this, we see the contradictions and inconsistencies, and we see that Putin has got himself into a corner. What do you think the US should do about it at this point?

    Quote Originally Posted by JMA View Post
    The problem with this thread is that Outlaw is making the running and offering his take on the situation given the facts (and his career experience) at his disposal... and there are a few Obama apologists chirping from the bleachers.
    Actually I have yet to see Outlaw make a concrete statement of what he thinks the US did wrong, what he thinks should have been done instead, and what he thinks the US should be doing now. Haven't heard that from you either.

    I don't think the US government's course has been ideal, but I don't see what other realistic options they had under the circumstances. I don't think a Republican administration would have played it much differently under the circumstances.

    Quote Originally Posted by JMA View Post
    What is clear is that Russia would not have attempted what they have - in annexing Crimea and invading eastern Ukraine - unless they were sure they would get away with it.
    Nobody is ever sure. They obviously believed they would get away with it enough to take the risk. In Crimea they were right. In the Eastern Ukraine maybe not so right, remains to be seen.

    Quote Originally Posted by JMA View Post
    Putin correctly assessed the US ability to influence the EU to the extent of presenting a unified front against the aggressor is a thing of the past.
    A thing of the past? What past is that? When has the US ever had the power to dictate policy to Europe? If a "united front" is dictated by one party, it's not a united front. The united front of the cold war, to the extent that it existed, was not dictated by US influence, it was there because the US and Europe had similar perceptions of the threat and how it could be countered.

    Putin correctly believed that if he grabbed Crimea fast enough he could impose a fait accomplii before the US and the EU could work through their disparate agendas and come up with a response. That worked for him. In the Eastern Ukraine he apparently believed that he could get the same result gradually, through proxies. That doesn't seem to be working out so well.

    Quote Originally Posted by JMA View Post
    While the incremental sanctions may be having some effect as they are increased they are a day late and a dollar short in preventing the annexation of Crimea and the invasion of eastern Ukraine (and the shooting down of a commercial airliner). That I suggest how the reaction to Russian actions should be assessed. Will they lead to the restoration of the pre-invasion status quo with appropriate reparations?
    We have no way of knowing if any alternative policy would have prevented any of these things. Assessing what might have been is at best speculative, especially when nobody seems willing to say what would have been a better (and realistically practical) course of action.

    I don't think it's likely that the status quo ante will be restored in any exact way. Whether or not the new status quo favors Russia remains to be seen. If they gain Crimea but see the rest of the Ukraine end up in firmly pro-Western hands that is hardly a win.

    Quote Originally Posted by JMA View Post
    Once this has been achieved steps should be talken to ensure Russia is in no position to repeat this terriorial aggression ever again.
    What do you think those steps should be?
    Last edited by Dayuhan; 08-07-2014 at 08:23 AM.
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    dayuhan/AP---here is where the conversation gets sidetracked deliberately most of the time by AP on the term rouge.

    I stated a number of times use the somewhat simiplied term rouge state as defined by Wikipedia as a basis and then expand or reduce in the debate.

    There are three core reasons that must be filled in order to be defined a rouge state---and I do not use it in the neo con way.

    If you then look at the definition and one notices that word WMD is used as one of the three reasons I would and have argued the shooting down of a civilian airliner and killing 298 with a SAM is in fact the usage of WMD---just as the random shelling of civilian targets by the Russian irregulars via the BM21 and 27s are also in fact the reflect the use of WMD.

    This is where JMA is coming from and I have actually shifted to the same view after watching Putin the last six months.

    Had the west gone immediately to the sanctions that were just handed out Putin would have side stepped and stopped as it has shown him that yes even the west is willing to be hurt economically in the process.

    But by dragging it out and appearing indecisive Putin continued on---and that is where JMA is coming from--there was absolutely no decisive actions taken by the EU nor for that matter Obama and company.

    The only one who saw the West's weakness's but was then throttled back by the WH was the NATO Commander Breedlove who called it exactly right straight from the beginning.

    See Putin thought the response by the West to the Crimea was weak, he believed there would be far more support from his fellow Ukrainian Russians than actually did occur and he made the fatal mistake of really believing his own propaganda so in the end he has to move on the Ukraine as he literally maneuvered himself into a corner and has been unwilling to accept the exit shown him six different times by both the EU and the US.

    The world I am afraid at least in power politics is still defined by perceptions and in the case of Putin's his perceptions are running counter to reality.

    So whether you or AP like the word rouge that is exactly what the actions being taken by Putin really reflect.

    By the way so me based on the Wikipedia rouge definition just how many more countries could you name using that definition-none--Dayuhan you are wrong on the comment and thus this is why these comments from you and AP go nowhere.

    I would argue Putin totally miscalculated and had no Plan B thus invasion is fast becoming his Plan B if he wants to be reelected.

    If you had access to Russian media and spoke Russian you would have been amazed at the outpouring of comments yesterday in Russia simply saying we need to protect even with the Army our fellow Russians in the Ukraine---sound vaguely similar to the Crimea?

    So much for Putin's view that Russia also protects Slavs.
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 08-07-2014 at 10:42 AM.

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    Council Member Dayuhan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    dayuhan/AP---here is where the conversation gets sidetracked deliberately most of the time by AP on the term rouge.
    The term is rogue. R-o-g-u-e rogue. Rouge is a sort of make-up. I know it's petty but seeing the word misspelled 50 times a day is making the copy editor in my brain a little crazy, and if you're going to use it that often you might as well spell it right.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    I stated a number of times use the somewhat simiplied term rouge state as defined by Wikipedia as a basis and then expand or reduce in the debate.

    There are three core reasons that must be filled in order to be defined a rouge state---and I do not use it in the neo con way.
    My question was whether the use of the term actually gets you anywhere in terms of defining responses. Whether rogue or not-rogue, Putin appears to have specific goals and to have calculated that the benefits of pursuing those goals will exceed the cost. He may be rogue. He may be wrong in his calculations. He is not crazy or irrational.

    The problem the US and the West face is how to change that calculation without making an even larger mess. If the term "rogue" doesn't help in defining a response, it's not worth arguing over... or misspelling.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Had the west gone immediately to the sanctions that were just handed out Putin would have side stepped and stopped as it has shown him that yes even the west is willing to be hurt economically in the process.

    But by dragging it out and appearing indecisive Putin continued on---and that is where JMA is coming from--there was absolutely no decisive actions taken by the EU nor for that matter Obama and company.
    Possibly... we have no way of knowing what would have happened in any hypothetical scenario. It doesn't really matter, because the nature of a coalition of peers is that it takes time to negotiate a response that's suitable to all parties. Peer coalitions do have certain advantages, but speed of action and rapid decision making in anything but a major threat situation are not among them. As Putin astutely recognized, there was never going to be a rapid decisive coordinated response. If he assumed that there would never be a coordinated response, he may have been wrong, but he was right in assuming there wouldn't be a rapid one.

    It is quite useless to speculate on what might have happened if the US and the EU had produced a rapid, decisive, and fully coordinated response, because it was never going to happen from the start. That's not a consequence of eroding US power, it's just the nature of the US/EU relationship.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    By the way so me based on the Wikipedia rouge definition just how many more countries could you name using that definition-none--Dayuhan you are wrong on the comment and thus this is why these comments from you and AP go nowhere.
    It was meant as a mildly amusing way of pointing out a persistent spelling error. The definition is of course quite correct, given the spelling.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    I would argue Putin totally miscalculated and had no Plan B thus invasion is fast becoming his Plan B if he wants to be reelected.
    On this I agree... the question is what can be done to adjust his calculations of cost and benefit I've already pointed out one possibility: for the Ukrainians to offer a cease-fire, amnesty, and a degree of autonomy as a way of pulling the rug out from any claim that peacekeeping forces are necessary. I don't think that's an ideal solution by any means, but if the Ukrainialn forces move into urban areas to root out the separatists it's going to be an engraved invitation to Putin for an invasion under the guise of peacekeeping. Better to not hand them the invitation.

    Again, though, the US can only recommend that: I don't think the Ukrainians are taking orders from the US or EU on this.

    If you have specific suggestions for what the US, EU, or Ukraine might do at this point to move things toward a better outcome, I'd love to hear them.

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    If you had access to Russian media and spoke Russian you would have been amazed at the outpouring of comments yesterday in Russia simply saying we need to protect even with the Army our fellow Russians in the Ukraine---sound vaguely similar to the Crimea?
    That doesn't surprise me at all. The question is how long those sentiments would remain if things don't go according to plan. The US public was all fired up about the Iraq war early on when things were going their way. Didn't last very long.
    “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary”

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    Quote Originally Posted by Outlaw
    If you then look at the definition and one notices that word WMD is used as one of the three reasons I would and have argued the shooting down of a civilian airliner and killing 298 with a SAM is in fact the usage of WMD---just as the random shelling of civilian targets by the Russian irregulars via the BM21 and 27s are also in fact the reflect the use of WMD.
    And... I addressed this by raising questions about the implications of classifying conventional weapon systems as "weapons of mass destruction". So - the next time a U.S. drone kills dozens of people in a wedding party, or a U.S. warship downs a civilian airliner, will you argue that the U.S. is a 'rogue' country recklessly using weapons of mass destruction?

    Quote Originally Posted by Dayuhan
    On this I agree... the question is what can be done to adjust his calculations of cost and benefit I've already pointed out one possibility: for the Ukrainians to offer a cease-fire, amnesty, and a degree of autonomy as a way of pulling the rug out from any claim that peacekeeping forces are necessary. I don't think that's an ideal solution by any means, but if the Ukrainialn forces move into urban areas to root out the separatists it's going to be an engraved invitation to Putin for an invasion under the guise of peacekeeping. Better to not hand them the invitation.
    At this point, this is probably the most realistic outcome with the highest possibility of restoring stability in the region. Kiev needs to find a way to reintegrate the opposition into the political process - that will isolate the radicals and undermine Russian justifications for intervention. What does Ukraine's political landscape look like if it exterminates the armed opposition?

    Quote Originally Posted by Outlaw
    See AP a rouge country having and threatening the use of nuclear weapons and yes in the early stages of the Crimea nuclear threats were in fact issued by members of the Duma
    Is that like U.S. Representative Tom Tancredo calling for the nuclear destruction of Mecca and Medina during the GWoT? There are reckless blowhards in every country. So - if we accept your argument that Russia is a rogue, reckless, criminal, irrational country carelessly throwing around threats of nuclear weapons, why is your proposed response to further provoke it? If there's no connection between the country's interests and its behavior, how can you be certain that escalated sanctions or increased U.S. military presence in eastern Europe won't be met with a nuclear first strike? The very ideas of deterrence and sanctions are premised on the assumption that the targeted state is a rational actor and will respond in a way desired by the other state(s).
    Last edited by AmericanPride; 08-07-2014 at 04:43 PM.
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    Council Member AmericanPride's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dayuhan
    I don't think it's likely that the status quo ante will be restored in any exact way. Whether or not the new status quo favors Russia remains to be seen. If they gain Crimea but see the rest of the Ukraine end up in firmly pro-Western hands that is hardly a win.
    I agree with this assessment. There's a couple of outstanding questions:

    o What will Ukraine's post-war political landscape look like? Will it be inclusive of ethnic Russian interests (and what are those interests)?

    o What will be Ukraine's relationship with EU and NATO? What kind of security and economic guarantees will be extended to Ukraine from those organizations?

    o Assuming a Ukrainian victory over the insurgents, where will the defeated fighters go? This region has a history of roaming armed brigades so if defeat seems imminient, will they withdraw to Russia (or Crimea) and establish a base in exile? Will Russia disarm them or keep them on a low burn for future political leverage?

    o What will Russia's political landscape look like? The conflict thus far seems to have strengthened the nationalists and realists in his administration - there seems to be a very distant hope that any liberal (read: Western) influence on policy will ever return. If defeated in Ukraine and sanctions continue, will this trigger a political crisis in Moscow (I doubt it)? Who could come to power afterwards?

    o What relationship does the U.S. and Europe want with Russia post-conflict? And how will the outcome affect Russia's perspective on other international security issues (i.e. Syria, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Central Asia, etc)?

    I classify the conflict in Crimea and eastern Ukraine as two different conflicts even though the belligerents are the same. The reason is that IMO Russia's intention in Crimea and eastern Ukraine are very different: it just so happens that Russia executed two wars (one direct, one proxy) simultaneously against the same adversary. Crimea is materially important for strategic and political reasons, and Russia's political claims are least nominally valid in comparison to the ones made regarding eastern Ukraine (why didn't Russia annex Donetsk after the region's independence referendum?). The conflict in eastern Ukraine, however, I think is aimed at keeping Russian interests at the bargaining table when Ukraine's political crisis is finally resolved and, failing that, weakening Ukraine to the extent that it cannot seriously impede Russian security interests in Europe.
    When I am weaker than you, I ask you for freedom because that is according to your principles; when I am stronger than you, I take away your freedom because that is according to my principles. - Louis Veuillot

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    Council Member Dayuhan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    I agree with this assessment. There's a couple of outstanding questions:
    Most of these questions are of course unanswerable. For one thing the government of the Ukraine will play a major role in determining the post-conflict landscape, and their positions are not yet clear. The US and the EU will have very substantial influence over the post-war Ukraine, which will be an economic dependency for years to come, but I personally think it would be a bad idea for the US/EU to degrade Ukrainian sovereignty by dictating policy. It will be a fairly delicate bit of balancing.

    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    o What will Ukraine's post-war political landscape look like? Will it be inclusive of ethnic Russian interests (and what are those interests)?
    We don't know. Part of the problem will be differentiating between ethnic Russian interests and Russian national interests... for example, the Russian demand for autonomy with a veto over foreign policy decisions is clearly intended as a Russian level over possible NATO membership and other links tot he West, and is incompatible with Ukrainian sovereignty. At the least the ethnic Russia community could be offered recognition of their language as official, as the Quebecois got in Canada. It would help a great deal if the ethnic Russians can develop a moderate leadership that can articulate expectations and desires of the community without being controlled by Putin. Whether or not that is possible we do not yet know.

    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    o What will be Ukraine's relationship with EU and NATO? What kind of security and economic guarantees will be extended to Ukraine from those organizations?
    Ukraine will be effectively dependent in economic terms. The extent of the assistance they receive, and the conditions attached to that assistance, will have to be carefully worked out.

    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    o Assuming a Ukrainian victory over the insurgents, where will the defeated fighters go? This region has a history of roaming armed brigades so if defeat seems imminient, will they withdraw to Russia (or Crimea) and establish a base in exile? Will Russia disarm them or keep them on a low burn for future political leverage?
    Ideally you'd send the Russians back to Russia and let Putin deal with them, and allow at least the rank and file of the local insurgents to stay without penalty. Of course that is hypothetical and the governments in question will have a lot to say about it. There may be some agitation among ethnic Russians for full scale relocation to Russia. There is some precedent for this: much of the ethnic Russian population of Kazakhstan has returned to Russia. Whether the Russians would be amenable, or how it could be done in a way that doesn't look like ethnic cleansing, is anyone's guess. My guess is that it will be handled badly and make a mess.

    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    o What will Russia's political landscape look like? The conflict thus far seems to have strengthened the nationalists and realists in his administration - there seems to be a very distant hope that any liberal (read: Western) influence on policy will ever return. If defeated in Ukraine and sanctions continue, will this trigger a political crisis in Moscow (I doubt it)? Who could come to power afterwards?
    Not possible to know or control.

    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    o What relationship does the U.S. and Europe want with Russia post-conflict? And how will the outcome affect Russia's perspective on other international security issues (i.e. Syria, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Central Asia, etc)?
    I think the risks to "the relationship" are in many ways overrated. The commercial interests on both sides are too strong to repress out of enduring pique, and I'd expect trade relations to be renewed pretty quickly if the conflict is resolved. If the resolution of the conflict is handled in a way intended to inflict outright defeat (or emasculation) of Russia, we can expect them to disrupt our strategic interests to the greatest extent of their ability. Of course that doesn't have to happen.

    Quote Originally Posted by AmericanPride View Post
    I classify the conflict in Crimea and eastern Ukraine as two different conflicts even though the belligerents are the same. The reason is that IMO Russia's intention in Crimea and eastern Ukraine are very different: it just so happens that Russia executed two wars (one direct, one proxy) simultaneously against the same adversary. Crimea is materially important for strategic and political reasons, and Russia's political claims are least nominally valid in comparison to the ones made regarding eastern Ukraine (why didn't Russia annex Donetsk after the region's independence referendum?). The conflict in eastern Ukraine, however, I think is aimed at keeping Russian interests at the bargaining table when Ukraine's political crisis is finally resolved and, failing that, weakening Ukraine to the extent that it cannot seriously impede Russian security interests in Europe.
    The problem here is that "Russian security interests in Europe" seem to require an allied or at least neutral Ukraine, and short of outright conquest that no longer appears to be achievable. How that sorts out is anybody's guess. The west cannot promise a neutral Ukraine, because that would intrude on the sovereign right of the Ukraine to choose its own alliances. If the Ukraine goes firmly pro-west, even without Crimea, the only ally the Russians have on their western border is Belarus, and that's a shaky ally at best. If Russia can't control the eventual transition out of Lukashenko's rule, they may be left with exactly the situation they want to avoid: the West on their doorstep with no buffer. What Russia will try to do about that is, of course, up to them.
    “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary”

    H.L. Mencken

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    Quote Originally Posted by Dayuhan View Post
    ... and allow at least the rank and file of the local insurgents to stay without penalty.
    This stuff is straight out of cloud cuckoo land. I give up.

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    Quote Originally Posted by JMA View Post
    This stuff is straight out of cloud cuckoo land. I give up.
    You need to resolve the conflict without giving the Russians a gold-plated pretext to come openly across the border in the guise of a "peacekeeping force". How do you propose to do it?

    The point of offering a settlement that appears at least superficially magnanimous is to undercut the Russian narrative and underscore the weakness of Russian claims that intervention is needed to protect ethnic Russians. Of course they will try some counter-propaganda, but the quality of Russian propaganda is very low and effectiveness will be limited.

    If they refuse the settlement you express great concern for civilian life, urge all civilians to leave, offer refuge and safe passage, etc. Again, the point is to take away the "crimes against civilians" narrative that the Russians need to support intervention. They will attempt to use that narrative anyway, but the you can deprive it of traction and make it weaker.

    If they accept, you send the non-indigenous Russians out, seize the equipment, re-establish the border, arrest the worst leaders... then you can renege on the agreement and do whatever you want, as long as you keep it below the threshold that would trigger intervention.

    Insistence on complete military victory followed by rigorous punishment and/or ethnic cleansing for all separatists is just going to provoke direct intervention and a broader conflict. Who gains from that?

    How would you propose to resolve the conflict in the eastern Ukraine without provoking direct intervention?
    Last edited by Dayuhan; 08-08-2014 at 04:28 AM.
    “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary”

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    Dayuhan---here is where both you and AP get amazingly off track---while you debate what should be done to give Putin an exit off the war road he is on he does not want to come off it--for that matter he cannot come off it if he wants to be reelected.

    Here is why:

    If in fact what the Ukrainian SBU released yesterday is true and it makes sense ----Russia wanted on 17 July to cross the border and the SBU is indicating they have the voice intercepts to prove Russia movements towards the border at a distance of 500m from the border---the Buk was as the SBU indicates driven and manned by a full Russian crew as they have the voice intercepts---and a Ukraine@war blogger has shown how the Buk was in fact tied into the Russian AD system---the SBU is indicating that the Buk was to have shot down a Russian Aeroflot flight that was on the same exact track but at 11.3kms in height ---it was right above and slightly to the rear of the MH17 which was at 10kms in height and twenty minutes in front of the Aeroflot flight.

    The SBU is indicating that the Russian crew got the Ukrainian town names wrong and placed itself in the MH17 flight path not that town which was directly under the Aeroflot flight.

    The Aeroflot flight was to have crashed then in Ukrainian controlled areas not as the MH17 did in irregular areas giving the Russia military the opportunity to secure the crash site--- blame the UA---- and conduct "peacekeeping" operations.

    They were just as stunned as were the irregulars when it was MH17 that came down.

    At the same time both you and AP need to go back and overlay the dates and times of the Russian MRL and artillery fires into the Ukraine---and watch the up tick in firing just before the 17th and through the first two days of the crash---really check the dates and times.

    There was an attempted run by the Russian Army with tanks and APC physically into the Ukraine on the night of 12/13 July that was both fired at and blocked by the UA that has largely gone unnoticed.

    Secondly, AP keeps talking about and talking about Russia being pushed around and pushed around and threatened---does this sound like the US is the one pushing, nudging, cornering, and agitating Russia?

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/...e-least-16-ti/

    The last time I checked neither NATO or the US has been making airborne border runs and crossing into Russian airspace unless there is something I do not know about.

    Take these actions and paste it to the reported very aggressive actions of Russian fighters against the RC135 in neutral waters this week and one has a pattern and it is not that of a "poor" pushed around and beat up on Russia but a very aggressive in your face Russia that is actually crossing boundaries that were never crossed even by the SU in the height of the Cold War days.

    AP/Dayuhan---that is the key what is being done now by Putin was a red line never crossed by the SU even in the worst of the CW days. Both sides knew the game---Putin is not playing a game this time.

    Again back to both you and AP---why does the world need Russia which only contributed two raw resources to the world economy and one is running out in 2020 and do not give me an answer that well the Russians are contributing their efforts in other hotspots the US needs assistance with---because actually when you look at their assistance it is almost always against anything we do in those hotspots to include now the latest agreements with Iran?
    Last edited by OUTLAW 09; 08-08-2014 at 10:59 AM.

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    Council Member Dayuhan's Avatar
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    Just to focus on the one clear issue in all that...

    Quote Originally Posted by OUTLAW 09 View Post
    Again back to both you and AP---why does the world need Russia which only contributed two raw resources to the world economy and one is running out in 2020
    First of all, whether or not anyone "needs" Russia is completely irrelevant. Russia exists, so they have to be dealt with. We cannot make them stop existing. Whether or not anyone needs them, they still have to be managed. I don't see why "need" is in the picture at all. We don't need Iran or North Korea either, but we still have to deal with them.

    How exactly do you figure Russia is running out of anything in 2020? What's the source on that?

    The US does, in reality, need Russia to keep selling oil, as does everyone else who buys oil. They export 7mbpd +, and if that comes off the market it's hard to imagine where the world oil price will go.

    I really don't place much faith in the theory that the MH17 attack was actually a failed false flag attack on a Russian plane. That would need a lot more support to be taken seriously. The question also remains: if Putin wants so badly to intervene in the east, why didn't he do it a long time ago, like after the pseudo-referendum? The troops were in place, the pretext was there, why hold back? Either there's some mysterious force restraining him, or he doesn't want it as badly as you say he does.

    Still waiting for your suggestions on what the US, EU and Ukraine should be doing.
    Last edited by Dayuhan; 08-08-2014 at 12:52 PM.
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    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLr77KgJXWA

    102 conscripts deserted in Zhitomirskaya oblast' (Central Ukraine)

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fX0B-3mGALQ

    Over 400 Ukrainian soldiers deserted into Russian territory, 130 have returned to Ukraine, the rest stay, afraid of punishment for desertion.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQNaeDsYmjw

    Ukrainian officer: Generals betrayed us, left to die, to save my guys I brought them to Russia.
    Last edited by mirhond; 08-08-2014 at 02:24 PM.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Outlaw
    The SBU is indicating that the Russian crew got the Ukrainian town names wrong and placed itself in the MH17 flight path not that town which was directly under the Aeroflot flight.
    I'm going to need more than the word of a Ukrainian intelligence officer to believe that Russia intended to shoot down an Aeroflot flight in order to justify direct military intervention. (1) Why wasn't this report disclosed earlier? (2) Why would Moscow contrive this justification so late in the game when the Donetsk referendum provided sufficient political cover for occupation?

    Quote Originally Posted by outlaw
    because actually when you look at their assistance it is almost always against anything we do in those hotspots to include now the latest agreements with Iran?
    As I've stated previously, this is the spoiler strategy that Russia is pursuing in its foreign policy.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dayuhan
    The problem here is that "Russian security interests in Europe" seem to require an allied or at least neutral Ukraine, and short of outright conquest that no longer appears to be achievable.
    I agree with this. The collapse of the Yanukovych government upset the apple cart and now everyone is scurrying to pick up as much fruit as possible.
    When I am weaker than you, I ask you for freedom because that is according to your principles; when I am stronger than you, I take away your freedom because that is according to my principles. - Louis Veuillot

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    Quote Originally Posted by slapout9 View Post
    This thread is Good example of why Mitt Romney is becoming so popular again. He had and has an excellent grasp of economic and worlds affairs. This competent and accurate world view is completely lacking in the current administration, which seems happy with the continued decline of US power and prestige.
    Slap the news is all bad...

    Carl says wait for 2017... but if the head is used more than the heart it will be 2024 - after two terms of Hillary.

    By then it will be all over for the US as a super power.

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