From Finnish stand point that speech is also remarkable and worrying. Finland is one of those countries that got their independence in 1917 thanks to Lenin.
Can you link this stuff about the OSCE saying shells are mostly landing on separatist areas, and the bit about no Ukrainian attacks at all? I've tried to find corroboration for both, but can't.Were they saying that because they were planning on provoking conflict there themselves?
The OSCE has been saying that there has been an uptick in hostile incidents in the Donbass, that the shells are mostly landing on the DPR/LPR side of the line of contact, and meanwhile western media is saying that there is "no credible reporting" of any Ukrainian attacks there at all. We're evidently being sold something.
The difference between troops being in one's own country, and troops marching into another country, is "arbitrary"? Absolutely incredible take.You're right that the situations are different; the Ukrainians were actually shooting. Everything else is an arbitrary distinction.
Well, you've beaten them once...From Finnish stand point that speech is also remarkable and worrying. Finland is one of those countries that got their independence in 1917 thanks to Lenin.
No matter what Ron Perlman says, war has changed. And I wouldn't call that beating. We survived long enough by the skin of our teeth. It was more of a Rocky 1 type of situation.Well, you've beaten them once...
But I thought "war never changes." 0_0No matter what Ron Perlman says, war has changed.
Can you link this stuff about the OSCE saying shells are mostly landing on separatist areas, and the bit about no Ukrainian attacks at all? I've tried to find corroboration for both, but can't.
I've found the OSCE's most recent map, showing more ceasefire violations on the separatist side of the line, but that explicitly includes outgoing attacks.
Borders are indeed arbitrary. And whether you recognize a border-- or a country-- is also arbitrary. Donetsk and Luhansk have borders, after all. An army moving against another army is not so arbitrary.The difference between troops being in one's own country, and troops marching into another country, is "arbitrary"? Absolutely incredible take.
You simply cannot seem to resist overinterpretation. But no. And thanks for asking this time.Can I assume from this that you don't respect a country's right to have borders?
You should not be surprised by that line coming from a person who believes nation states should be abolished.The difference between troops being in one's own country, and troops marching into another country, is "arbitrary"? Absolutely incredible take.
Also helps that a bit before that Stalin was worried about the Soviet military being a threat to him, and took steps. As "competent officer" and "threat" tended to overlap, disposing of the threats caused all sorts of problems with the military.No matter what Ron Perlman says, war has changed. And I wouldn't call that beating. We survived long enough by the skin of our teeth. It was more of a Rocky 1 type of situation.
That map is one of a type that is quite frequently produced by the OSCE. I'd recommend actually going to the source, because they make clear that those spots are not just "impacts". They're ceasefire violations. Including outgoing ones.Ukraine – Who is firing at whom and who is lying about it? | MR Online
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has an observer mission along the line of control between the government and rebel side in south east Ukraine.mronline.org
The bit about "no credible reporting" of Ukrainian attacks at all was from NPR yesterday (somewhere between 12 and 20 hours ago). I'm not going to try to find the segment.
What self-serving tripe. The borders are whatever helps the Russian government at whatever time, then, their own previous international commitments and legal agreements be damned. I'm sure you'll remember that next time the US arms an insurgency overseas and then parachutes its troops in: borders are meaningless! They've got as much right as anyone else!Borders are indeed arbitrary. And whether you recognize a border-- or a country-- is also arbitrary. Donetsk and Luhansk have borders, after all. An army moving against another army is not so arbitrary.
Eh, ain't got a patch on you, with the moon-logic strawman interpretations you've made of other people's positions recently.You simply cannot seem to resist overinterpretation. But no. And thanks for asking this time.
The best I can offer Putin is this.I have trouble understanding Russia's action from a rational point of view. It makes perfect sense to me if I attribute wounded pride as the driving force of their action, but not rationality. Or out otherwise, Putin's action in my eyes fit more our Wilhelm no. 2 than a David Xanatos.
Starts to look a fair bit like the British Empire. Loss of numerous territories over a short period of time; national status and importance on the world stage diminished; attempt to aggrandise and restore past "glory" by aggressively reasserting control.It's quite a comedown for Russia (as the USSR) to own a load of places, and within a generation find they're basically sort of "the enemy", and even more galling that they willingly left. Russia, like many imperial powers, has unpopularity issues with its ex-territories. Russia's been losing influence over these states because it doesn't really have anything to offer.
I don't think that's quite right. If you look at the selection of maps (in one image) I directly linked from them that summarize the whole period from 2016 to 2021, they've separated explosions from ceasefire violations and their ceasefire violation map notably does not include explosions. So we're dealing with at least three types of map relating to ceasefire violations and explosions (not including the ones on FOM restrictions and other stuff). The one in the article I linked appears to be an amalgam of the explosion+ceasefire violation map types and while it marks incoming and presumably outgoing ceasefire violations in red, orange and yellow shading like a macabre weather map, it also marks explosions-- where they, y'know, exploded-- separately as their own icons.That map is one of a type that is quite frequently produced by the OSCE. I'd recommend actually going to the source, because they make clear that those spots are not just "impacts". They're ceasefire violations. Including outgoing ones.
To be clear: you're defending news outlets for being utterly silent on Ukrainian troop positions and movements near its Russian border including their active engagement in hostilities against separatists while these media outlets at the same time sound klaxons about Russian troop positions.I'm sure you'll remember that next time the US arms an insurgency overseas and then parachutes its troops in: borders are meaningless! They've got as much right as anyone else!
I've made the same analogy myself. Russia is where the UK was postwar: having to get used to the fact it's no longer a major global player, and taking it badly.Starts to look a fair bit like the British Empire. Loss of numerous territories over a short period of time; national status and importance on the world stage diminished; attempt to aggrandise and restore past "glory" by aggressively reasserting control.
On the OSCE maps of that kind, the colour tends to represent frequency, and explicitly includes explosions. There's usually a separate table, but not a separate visual indicator, for explosions.I don't think that's quite right. If you look at the selection of maps (in one image) I directly linked from them that summarize the whole period from 2016 to 2021, they've separated explosions from ceasefire violations and their ceasefire violation map notably does not include explosions. So we're dealing with at least three types of map relating to ceasefire violations and explosions (not including the ones on FOM restrictions and other stuff). The one in the article I linked appears to be an amalgam of the explosion+ceasefire violation map types and while it marks incoming and presumably outgoing ceasefire violations in red, orange and yellow shading like a macabre weather map, it also marks explosions-- where they, y'know, exploded-- separately as their own icons.
Also, if you look at the map I linked, for at least the five years it represents there's a pattern regarding the placement of ceasefire violations and explosions that are very deep in either territory. Both sides of the line of contact have ceasefire violations that are far away from it (with no apparent attribution) while the separatist side has a monopoly on explosions that are far away from the line of contact (presumably all of them the responsibility of the Ukrainian military). It's not altogether clear what precisely that means, but it is interesting.
Nope, but I appreciate you providing another example of yourself leaping to over-interpret someone else's post. It does help to illustrate what I was saying before.To be clear: you're defending news outlets for being utterly silent on Ukrainian troop positions and movements near its Russian border including their active engagement in hostilities against separatists while these media outlets at the same time sound klaxons about Russian troop positions.
Yes, who recognises them. So: if one country unilaterally recognises borders that nobody else recognises, does that convey a justification to invade?What is arbitrary about borders is where they are, and more importantly to this discussion whether they are recognized, and who recognizes them. That Ukraine is engaged in an attempt to crush people who refused to accept the Euromaidan coup is certainly relevant to that whole situation there, its military buildup along the line of contact in Donestk and Luhansk regions is certainly also relevant. But we have only analysis and description of the Russian troop positions and movements as if the Ukrainian military simply doesn't exist and isn't to be thought of as a potential concern or, indeed, something Russia could possibly be reacting to. So we treat, whether accurately or not, Russia as the only entity with any agency or even any presence in the situation, a framing which all but directly poses the question: how are WE going to intervene? Because obviously no one else is even there!
Er, there's a key on the map image?If you want to make a case based on OSCE data, then you'll need to provide something from the source, context and key and all. Having it passed through the filter of a third-party which we already know isn't accurately reporting the meaning of the data isn't helpful.
Yes, that perfectly describes the image I linked directly. But on the image in the article, there is a separate visual indicator for explosions. It is listed in the key at the bottom.On the OSCE maps of that kind, the colour tends to represent frequency, and explicitly includes explosions. There's usually a separate table, but not a separate visual indicator, for explosions.
Nobody else other than the people who have had military control over that area for the past several years, you mean? Russian soldiers including their vanguard came in by bus on main roads-- hardly a blitzkrieg.So: if one country unilaterally recognises borders that nobody else recognises, does that convey a justification to invade?