Ukraine

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
12,153
6,407
118
Country
United Kingdom
Are any of them true?
Well, yes. He reneged on a deal he'd negotiated and agreed, and pursued a policy that was widely despised in his country, under economic pressure and blackmail. He launched a lethal anti-protester crackdown and endorsed the use of live weapons against civilians. And his security forces collaborated with Russian security forces in street violence against Ukrainian civilians. Any one of which is traitorous.

Agreeing to the terms set by Europe would have been malicious conspiracy to promote a hostile foreign power over his own country.
The IMF terms were dogshit.

Yet, Ukraine's parliament overwhelmingly approved the association agreement, and Yanukovych himself endorsed it. Until Russia blackmailed him.

And so instead, we had an actual malicious conspiracy to promote a hostile foreign power over his own country.
 

Agema

Do everything and feel nothing
Legacy
Mar 3, 2009
9,237
6,508
118
Elon knows better than the aerospace engineers.
I can't help but feel that an air force entirely reliant on remote control would be alarmingly vulnerable to hacking or signal jamming. Does any military want to risk it's entire air force being crippled that way?
 

Hades

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2013
2,289
1,738
118
Country
The Netherlands
Are any of them true?



Agreeing to the terms set by Europe would have been malicious conspiracy to promote a hostile foreign power over his own country.
Its always pretty facinating to see tankies try to rehabilitate and reinvent yanukovych as some sort of freedom fighter against the evil west who just wanted to ''protect'' Ukraine. He's a corrupt olicharch who jails his political opponent, pretty much the furthest from left wing you can get, yet tankies keep carrying water for him. Had the trade deal been some nefarious plot to rob the public yanukovych would have been the first to sign up rather than martyr himself. And had the Ukrainian public been on his mind he'd not have forced them into the cultural and economic dead end that's Russia, nor respond with extreme violence agains them the moment they object.

I know ''the enemy of the enemy is my friend'' but is Europe sooo horrible we now count oligarchs working on behalf of Russia as our friends?
 
  • Like
Reactions: bluegate

Agema

Do everything and feel nothing
Legacy
Mar 3, 2009
9,237
6,508
118
The enemy of your enemy is... also your enemy.

Otherwise, they'd just be your ally, and you wouldn't bother with the whole "enemy of my enemy" description.
 

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
12,153
6,407
118
Country
United Kingdom
Had the trade deal been some nefarious plot to rob the public yanukovych would have been the first to sign up rather than martyr himself.
Keep in mind, Yanukovych did endorse the EU association agreement. His cabinet unilaterally supported it; the Verkhovna Rada overwhelmingly voted in favour; and he himself encouraged its ratification. Including the EU's required justice reforms, though he dragged his feet on the latter.

He then reversed course following the threat of retaliatory trade restrictions from you-know-who. Unilaterally, without his own cabinet or Congress' support.

Neither loan offer (either the IMF's or Russia's) were a nefarious plot. Both were simply trying to encourage Ukraine to build closer ties with their own blocs. The terms of neither offer were good: the IMF demanded domestic austerity measures (as they also did in Greece), while Russia demanded anti-democracy crackdowns, and ended up withholding agreed funds unless Yanukovych agreed to violent suppression methods.
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,814
3,549
118
Country
United States of America
He launched a lethal anti-protester crackdown and endorsed the use of live weapons against civilians.
This is contested and likely false considering how long it took to frame up a few of the Berkut police.


But this contradicts the war narrative, so you never wanted to hear it.
 

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
12,153
6,407
118
Country
United Kingdom
This is contested and likely false considering how long it took to frame up a few of the Berkut police.
Treating the sniper incident as the sole example is rather odd. Security forces had been killing protesters for much of two months by then.

There's a question mark over the 20th Feb snipers' identity and its fair to say that's contested. Yet security forces had been freely killing protesters already; Yanukovych said they had the right to use weapons and acted according to existing laws, even when denying personal involvement.

But this contradicts the war narrative, so you never wanted to hear it.
Amusing phrasing, given the narrative actually used to launch this war is the one you're all-in on.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gergar12

Ezekiel

Elite Member
May 29, 2007
1,367
627
118
Country
United States
Lindsey Graham gave the game away on national TV a few days ago. That it's about precious resources. Why do the Republicans still allow this idiot to speak?

 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,814
3,549
118
Country
United States of America

Are we still listening to Ukrainians?

Treating the sniper incident as the sole example is rather odd. Security forces had been killing protesters for much of two months by then.

There's a question mark over the 20th Feb snipers' identity and its fair to say that's contested. Yet security forces had been freely killing protesters already; Yanukovych said they had the right to use weapons and acted according to existing laws, even when denying personal involvement.
"Freely killing"? Your characterization is misleading at best.

Amusing phrasing, given the narrative actually used to launch this war is the one you're all-in on.
It's only corroborated by predictions made by people involved in US decision-making, academics who studied the matter, and the public statements of US and European officials.
 

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
12,153
6,407
118
Country
United Kingdom
Are we still listening to Ukrainians?
Hooray for attrition, and the unrestricted bombing of civilian homes and energy infrastructure! Just say what you mean.

"Freely killing"? Your characterization is misleading at best.
When American security forces gun down civilians or protesters, you rightfully condemn the kind of weaselly bootlicking people come out with in defence of lethal cops and mercs.

It's only corroborated by predictions made by people involved in US decision-making, academics who studied the matter, and the public statements of US and European officials.
*Some such people (while you dismissed such predictions, insisting anyone who said Russia would invade was being "hysterical"). Though even those who acknowledge that NATO expansion would be seen as provocative also tend to recognise that Russia's response is an unjustified, illegal annexation.

Of course, more such figures corroborate the clearer explanation, that Russia invaded a country to seize land and resources, and to restore a mythical imperial ownership.
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
5,814
3,549
118
Country
United States of America
Hooray for attrition, and the unrestricted bombing of civilian homes and energy infrastructure! Just say what you mean.
So that's a "no", then. Only listen to them if they want to fight. We can't trust them now that they've been manipulated by their own experiences.


When American security forces gun down civilians or protesters, you rightfully condemn the kind of weaselly bootlicking people come out with in defence of lethal cops and mercs.
I do not however abandon any attempt at accuracy. The Right Sector sniping absolutely dwarfs the previous violence.

Also, I'm pretty sure I haven't said anything condemning the killing of Ashli Babbitt nor those who defend it, which is the closest analog to the violence in Maidan Square that preceded the sniper attack.

*Some such people (while you dismissed such predictions, insisting anyone who said Russia would invade was being "hysterical"). Though even those who acknowledge that NATO expansion would be seen as provocative also tend to recognise that Russia's response is an unjustified, illegal annexation.
And Biden-- who also said Russia was going to invade, although missed the timing-- did seemingly everything he could to cause it to happen; Russia was actively seeking a diplomatic resolution to the provocation caused by NATO seeking to expand to Ukraine and Biden dismissed all that in favor of simply saying that Russia was going to invade. Very helpful, thanks, Biden.

Of course, more such figures corroborate the clearer explanation, that Russia invaded a country to seize land and resources, and to restore a mythical imperial ownership.
American security state ghouls like vacuous Victoria Nuland and their handmaidens tend to echo the State Department and Western media invention of reality. That is the expectation regardless of the facts. It is remarkable that such a substantial portion do not in this case.