Ukraine

Seanchaidh

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While explaining his reasons for invading Ukraine, he's repeatedly ranted about how Ukrainian independence was a mistake, and that it doesn't have "real statehood" or a distinct identity. He did so again the other day, as one of America's most rabid right-wing pundits fawningly interviewed him. You know this.
I read a transcript of the interview. He did not.
 

Silvanus

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I read a transcript of the interview. He did not.
Vladimir Putin said:
Ukraine is not even a state. What is Ukraine? A part of its territory is in Eastern Europe, but another part, a considerable one, was a gift from us.
Vladimir Putin said:
Therefore, modern Ukraine is entirely the product of the Soviet era. We know and remember well that it was shaped – for a significant part – on the lands of historical Russia. [...] One fact is crystal clear: Russia was robbed, indeed.
Vladimir Putin said:
So, I will start with the fact that modern Ukraine was entirely created by Russia or, to be more precise, by Bolshevik, Communist Russia. [...] When it comes to the historical destiny of Russia and its peoples, Lenin’s principles of state development were not just a mistake; they were worse than a mistake. [...] it is a great pity that the fundamental and formally legal foundations of our state were not promptly cleansed of the odious and utopian fantasies inspired by the revolution. [...]
It should be noted that Ukraine actually never had stable traditions of real statehood.
Vladimir Putin said:
The Soviet government created Soviet Ukraine. This is well known to everyone. Until then, there was never any Ukraine in the history of humanity.
Vladislav Surkov said:
There is no Ukraine. There is Ukrainian-ness. That is, a specific disorder of the mind. [...] a muddle instead of a state. […] But there is no nation. There is only a brochure, ‘The Self-Styled Ukraine’, but there is no Ukraine.”
Dmitry Medvedev said:
there is neither industry, nor a state [in Ukraine]. [...] In 2013? There was industry there, but there was no state even then.
 

Seanchaidh

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none of these draw a line between that historical context and the reason for the invasion; he brings them up because they are relevant to understanding the context surrounding Ukrainian nationalism and the various Ukrainian separatist movements (Crimea, Donbas). The interview you're citing makes it absolutely clear that the conflict is about NATO and the failure of Minsk, was almost resolved in an agreement that provided for Ukrainian neutrality, legal suppression of Ukrainian Nazi groups, and a pledge not to join NATO which was sabotaged at the eleventh hour by Boris Johnson. Ukraine's apparent lack of a firm historical foundation is relevant but not motivating. It is odd that you want to focus on that.

Or did you mean to subtly shift the goalposts from "this is the reason, it's blindingly obvious" to "he said things about it"?
 

bluegate

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Sean, you're a joke.

And yes, I know this is coming from someone who mostly just contributes one-liners in these topics.
 

Silvanus

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none of these draw a line between that historical context and the reason for the invasion; he brings them up because they are relevant to understanding the context surrounding Ukrainian nationalism and the various Ukrainian separatist movements (Crimea, Donbas). The interview you're citing makes it absolutely clear that the conflict is about NATO and the failure of Minsk, was almost resolved in an agreement that provided for Ukrainian neutrality, legal suppression of Ukrainian Nazi groups, and a pledge not to join NATO which was sabotaged at the eleventh hour by Boris Johnson. Ukraine's apparent lack of a firm historical foundation is relevant but not motivating. It is odd that you want to focus on that.

Or did you mean to subtly shift the goalposts from "this is the reason, it's blindingly obvious" to "he said things about it"?
You think it not terribly relevant that he gave several of these quotes in a press conference about his decision to go to war?
You find it unconcerning that the President, as well as the former President, and his personal advisor on Ukraine, have all explicitly denied the existence of their neighbouring country as a sovereign state? Don't think that might have had a part to play in their decision to annex it, no? And you expect people to take that seriously?

What I find notable is that when an Israeli pol denies the chance for Palestinian statehood, you'll point to it (rightfully) as evidence of how little they care about the peace, sovereignty, and security of their neighbours. They don't need to say, "THIS IS WHY WE WENT TO WAR"-- you can see the obvious link between their rancid xenophobia and their actions. But here? Nah: Russian leaders literally begin an annexation, and rant repeatedly about how their target doesn't exist as a state, and you're here quibbling: ahkshually they didn't directly link their denial of statehood to their invasion, in this press conference about the invasion. So they're unrelated! Of course!

Absolute clownshow territory.
 
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Hades

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All this talk about history isn't really in Russia's favor anyway. Its hard to imagine a country so consistently aggressive, backwards and damaging to the world order regardless of its form. The Romanovs, the Soviets and now the gangsters in the Kremlin are all belligerent, war mongering, expansionist, oppressive to their own subjects and have a rather disgusting habit of poisoning their subjects with alcoholism.

Its kind of unique for a country to consistently have grotesque governments and Putin might not want to draw attention to this.
 

Thaluikhain

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Its kind of unique for a country to consistently have grotesque governments and Putin might not want to draw attention to this.
Up until fairly recently, governments didn't feel the need to pretend very hard not to be grotesque. If we decide that West Germany was all sunshine and roses after WW2, that's still living memory, and East Germany a generation later.

Russia worst than most, true.
 

Ag3ma

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Its kind of unique for a country to consistently have grotesque governments and Putin might not want to draw attention to this.
Sure, but in Putin's narrative, they weren't grotesque. When he talks about the historical land of Russia, there's no real acknowledgement of the fact that Russia conquered most of it. Or rather, his narrative is that the Russian race appeared, then had their territory stolen, and subsequently recovered it - implicitly justly.

For instance, he talks about Lithuania to picture it as sort of Russian, which was then subverted by the Poles. In doing so he is claiming ownership over the territories of medieval Lithuania, which included much of Belarus and Western Ukraine. However, this also could be read to imply he thinks Russia should own current Lithuania as well. This is backed up with when he says Russia had its historical territories at the time of Catherine the Great, which had by then conquered the Baltic States. I would be inclined to view Putin's history lesson as telling us he thinks the Baltic States should be Russian, too, and for NATO to prepare defences accordingly.

His story of WW2 is also illustrative. The real instigator of WW2 was... Poland. Poland first sold out Czechoslovakia for their own gain, and then made the Nazis attack it. Neat little bit of victim-blaming to skip over the whole Molotov-Ribbentrop pact.
 

Seanchaidh

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Absolute clownshow territory.
Yes, in that you are putting negative effort into understanding where the Russians are coming from. Did you actually look at the interview/read a transcript of it or did you just trust some propagandist to put some quotes together for you? The interview begins with a meandering look at the history but as the discussion moved toward the present the sharpest focus was put on NATO expansion, refusal of the collective west to negotiate a solution to the apparent plan to use Ukraine to undermine Russian security, and the repeated refusal of Ukraine to implement the Minsk Agreements as it said it would do.

His story of WW2 is also illustrative. The real instigator of WW2 was... Poland. Poland first sold out Czechoslovakia for their own gain, and then made the Nazis attack it. Neat little bit of victim-blaming to skip over the whole Molotov-Ribbentrop pact.
Yes, mentioning that Poland didn't allow the Soviet Union to traverse its territory to help Czechoslovakia defend itself from some mysterious threat that seems to have disappeared from all recollection of history since 2022 really is quite victim blaming. What was happening in Czechoslovakia that was so important? The answer may be forever lost to time.
 

Satinavian

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Yes, in that you are putting negative effort into understanding where the Russians are coming from. Did you actually look at the interview/read a transcript of it or did you just trust some propagandist to put some quotes together for you? The interview begins with a meandering look at the history but as the discussion moved toward the present the sharpest focus was put on NATO expansion, refusal of the collective west to negotiate a solution to the apparent plan to use Ukraine to undermine Russian security, and the repeated refusal of Ukraine to implement the Minsk Agreements as it said it would do.
Nothing of that is new.

All those issues have been discussed and analyzed repeatedly long ago.
They are widely regarded as just pretext and very unconvincing ones at that. They are all either not actually true or not even remotely worth waging a war for. That is why everyone would expect Putin to repeat them yet another time but doesn't bother engaging with them again.


In short : No one believes Putin when he says he invaded because the NATO expansion. Everyone believes Putin when he dreams of restoring Russia to its old imperial border or fantasizes about partitioning Poland again or similar stuff he did over the years.
 

Ag3ma

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In short : No one believes Putin when he says he invaded because the NATO expansion. Everyone believes Putin when he dreams of restoring Russia to its old imperial border or fantasizes about partitioning Poland again or similar stuff he did over the years.
I think part of the thing about Russia and NATO is that Russia viewed it in a form of security interest - being part of NATO offered it a degree of protection (because you can't be attacked by your allies) but also that if not a member of the EU and NATO, Russia is effectively "locked out" with vastly limited tools to influence it's old stomping grounds in Eastern Europe.

The obvious problem for Russia with EU and NATO entry is the compatibility issue that it's not remotely in the same political place: one part chaos and corruption and one part the same brutal authoritarianism of the USSR. It's hard enough co-ordinating that many countries. Look at how much trouble Hungary causes because it's got different ideas, and imagine how much havoc a country as large as Russia could cause from within the organisations.

People were happy to discuss Russia moving towards NATO back in the days when Russia looked like it might become a relatively stable and just democracy. Putin and team decided justice and democracy wasn't their vision of Russia, and the wheels duly fell of the wagon of NATO-EU amity.
 

Silvanus

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Yes, in that you are putting negative effort into understanding where the Russians are coming from. Did you actually look at the interview/read a transcript of it or did you just trust some propagandist to put some quotes together for you? The interview begins with a meandering look at the history but as the discussion moved toward the present the sharpest focus was put on NATO expansion, refusal of the collective west to negotiate a solution to the apparent plan to use Ukraine to undermine Russian security, and the repeated refusal of Ukraine to implement the Minsk Agreements as it said it would do.
Yes, I read a transcript. After a long rant about historical grievances, casting Ukraine as not a real independent country, he did indeed finally move on. The fact that he was able to fit more than one topic into an interview isn't really of much importance.

The salient point is, he (and the other architects of Russia's Ukraine policy) have repeatedly denied the existence of Ukraine, and its right to exist independently. They have done so in the context of conferences and interviews about his decision to invade and annex.

Less than this is more than enough for you when we discuss Likud's xenophobia and imperialism. Talk about "negative effort to understand"-- you're excusing and quibbling as they literally tell us Ukraine shouldn't exist.

some mysterious threat that seems to have disappeared from all recollection of history since 2022
Despite Russia's best efforts to keep the threat relevant, of course. Whenever an apologist for authoritarianism makes reference to the Nazi threat, it bears repeating that the largest financier and sponsor of neo-Nazis and fascists globally is Russia.
 
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Hades

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Did you actually look at the interview/read a transcript of it or did you just trust some propagandist to put some quotes together for you? The interview begins with a meandering look at the history but as the discussion moved toward the present the sharpest focus was put on NATO expansion, refusal of the collective west to negotiate a solution to the apparent plan to use Ukraine to undermine Russian security, and the repeated refusal of Ukraine to implement the Minsk Agreements as it said it would do.
That doesn't help much since Putin's stance on NATO expansion has always been illegitimate to begin with. Russia has no seat on the table when two sovereign countries negotiate their bonds with each other, and the only reason they want a seat on the table is that they know its harder to subjugate neighbors that have protection. Its not on the west to humor Russia's imperial pretensions.
 
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Hades

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As it turns out Putin has finally succeeded in killing Navalny. While its rather easy to respect his bravery surrendering himself to the Kremlin of all regimes when he was safely abroad and expecting to survive the ordeal says something about his naivety.
 
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Ag3ma

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As it turns out Putin has finally succeeded in killing Navalny. While its rather easy to respect his bravery surrendering himself to the Kremlin of all regimes when he was safely abroad and expecting to survive the ordeal says something about his naivety.
Of course, he might not have expected to survive long-term when he handed himself over. He might have decided to martyr himself.
 

Silvanus

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Of course, he might not have expected to survive long-term when he handed himself over. He might have decided to martyr himself.
Perhaps, but his return was Jan 2021. It was only late 2023 that the Russian government transferred him to an Arctic forced-labour camp, and before that had been denying his lawyers access to him for months. So the authorities had been really ramping up efforts to isolate him recently.
 

tstorm823

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Of course, he might not have expected to survive long-term when he handed himself over. He might have decided to martyr himself.
In a more reasonable nation, that might take some blame away for his death, but if the jail sentence is on false pretenses in the first place, it seems a distinction without a difference whether they killed him or he did.
 

Gergar12

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RIP.

I didn't agree with him on everything, but he was a reformer, and we needed more of him in Russia.
 

Seanchaidh

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Will you all be adopting Navalny's position on the conflict in Ukraine, then?