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[flagged] 'We stand with Ukraine for as long as it may take' – Keir Starmer tells Zelensky (bbc.com)
93 points by sirolimus 1 day ago | hide | past | favorite | 101 comments





At this point wouldn’t mind seeing Europe stand up and take the symbolic role of “leader of the free world” since my country’s administration seems to have quit on it.

Looks like Europe won't have a choice at this point. The parabolic behavior of the leaders of the US is destabilizing and hard to cooperate with.

If we don't the world will continue getting a lot more unstable. More countries will be invaded & annexed, more genocides take place and international laws will be violated without anyone enforcing them

I wonder whether EU has the capacity to pull up itself. After all it is not really an EU state. And do ordinary EU people really want that? I mean double the defence budget (or triple in certain cases), double the standing army and etc.

Peace in Europe benefits everyone—not just the EU, but also the U.S., Asia, and even Russia itself. If we fail to invest in defense, we risk more death and suffering from unchecked Russian expansion and bullying.

It’s hard to see where you stand here. You seem unconcerned about Russia taking Ukraine and then the Baltic states, as if that would be a positive outcome.

Is the full surrender and merging of Ukraine into Russia something you desire?


> What happens if Ukraine is given sufficient support to start winning and Putin decides to go nuclear?

That is a possibility. But there is a large cost associated with going nuclear. And that is why he hasn't done it, even after losing hundreds of thousands of soldiers.

Also, if you give Putin what he wants, because he might go nuclear, then the race to develop nukes will really heat up by all non-nuclear nations.

US signed Budapest memorandum. We promised to help defend Ukraine, if it gave up its nukes. Now we are trying to shake them down like a mafia. And also asking them to give in to Putin's demands, without asking Putin to give up anything.

We have fallen very far.


What happens if Ukraine is given sufficient support to start winning and Putin decides to go nuclear?

I don't want Russia to win either but we also have to operate in reality.


Is the threat of Russia using nuclear weapons enough to let it take all of Ukraine? Other countries?

Russia is not going to use nuclear weapons.


Even if Ukraine starts winning, a nuclear strike by Putin would trigger a catastrophic response from NATO and the international community, causing mutual destruction.

Furthermore, with your logic there is nothing stopping Russia from keep chipping away at Europe because everyone is afraid that Russia will use nuclear weapons.

With that rational, you might as well annex the entirety of Europe and call it Russia because Europe wants peace.


I'm not necessarily disagreeing but we also need to understand what the reality of nuclear war means in the modern era.

https://youtu.be/za6tZB19E4c


Which is why we can't give in and establish that nuclear powers can do whatever they want. That way just leads to getting closer and closer to nuclear war with every country now having to have their own nukes, not further from the risk of nuclear annihilation.

I guess I'm more interested in the how rather than the why. The why is kind of a given.

After Ukraine runs out of fodder for the meat-grinder (already on the verge of this now) who's children get sent to Ukraine? If we are not going to give Ukraine sufficient support to win the war, only prolong it, what is the timeline and the actual endgame?

To be clear, I'm not supporting Russia, I'm asking in clear terms, what exactly should the response be?


Why are you moving the goalposts? I responded to your comment asking what if things go too good for Ukraine. Not sure how 'but what if things go bad' is a reasoned follow up on your part. :

"What happens if Ukraine is given sufficient support to start winning and Putin decides to go nuclear? I don't want Russia to win either but we also have to operate in reality."


Not moving the goalposts at all. You completely side-stepped answering my question.

This has been the excuse for inaction since the invasion of Crimea. Clearly, Russia has no intention of stopping its westward expansion. Eventually we are going to have to bite the bullet.

Where does that logic end? Doesn’t that mean Putin just keeps going and going because we’re frightened?

WDYM? If alternative is war even closer to home, then doubling or tripling budget is nothing.

> I mean double the defence budget (or triple in certain cases), double the standing army and etc.

If we would actually do defense at the EU level, we could use that money a lot more efficiently through economies of scale and 2-4% of GDP would probably be enough to defeat russia.


That would make a lot of sense. Also, if done in smart way, a significant part of the budget could be used in the service of the society during peace time.

Whatever it takes. Thats the sentiment, like it or not..

If they wanted to, they could stop sheltering and seize Russian oil wealth hiding in the UK or stop the 'shadow fleet' used to export oil by sanctioning the importers. Probably won't though.

So we'll give Ukraine just enough support to keep the meat-grinder going but not enough to win the war. If Ukraine looks like winning at any point, Putin may escalate to tactical nuclear and we can't risk that.

So after a couple more years of the meat-grinder, Ukraine no longer has enough young men to maintain a viable force.

What happens then?


Well, we're going to find out, soon, what it's like to have Germany with nukes, with Sweden with nukes, with Finalnd with nukes, with Poland with nukes.

If you're the PM of Estonia, the only thing keeping you safe is either an "agreement" that you'll be protected or nukes. [edit] And agreements, at least signed by the U.S.A. appear to be bankrupt.

So, on what earth do you live on that we're safer now?


We are not safe. But successfully protecting Ukraine will bring us closer to nuclear war than we've ever been and we need to acknowledge that.

No one is going to launch a nuke in defense of Ukraine. Russia might launch a nuke as an offensive tactic. If they did that, it's the end of Russia, and depending on the escalation, the end of the world as we know it.

No one can control what will happen, but the simple reality is that allowing Russia to push a war of aggression out of fear of a nuclear attack endorses the idea that anyone with Nuclear capability can do what they want. China, India, etc can annex or invade and no one will stop them because it might trigger escalation. That reinforces the need for less powerful nations to pursue nuclear capability. Those smaller, less stable nations will be more likely to lose control of a nuclear weapon.

It's a catch 22 so we might as well try to err on the side of stopping wars of aggression. The other path is open for the cowards who would rather bend the knee or look the other way until aggression knocks on their front door.


So, would protecting Estonia bring us closure to Nuclear war? What would stop Russia from taking Estonia, Latvia, or even Lithuania, or is the West ready to use a Nuclear weapon in that situation? The Lithuanian capital city, Vilnius, is 20 km from the Russian border; they wouldn't even have to cross it to level the entire city. Would NATO attack Russia proper, would the West Nuke Russia to stop the destruction of Vilnius? I'm sure Lithuania would use a Nuclear weapon to protect itself.

If there is one thing that this war has shown us, it is that a country's security is in its own hands and a Nuclear Weapon is the difference between being invaded and conquered (ex: North Korea and soon to be Iran).


One could similarly point to Putin’s actions as bringing us closer to nuclear war. Acknowledge how close the world is to nuclear war, sure, but it’s hardly an argument against stabilizing Ukraine against Russia.

Well sure, if only everyone would just lie down and let Putin walk over them, once he was world dictator he would be appeased and the risk of nuclear war would finally go away.

The problem is, Putin will not stop at Ukraine if he is allowed to take it. His worldview is that the fall of the USSR is the greatest wrong of the last century, and he is determined to recreate it.

And Europe will suffer greatly if a resurgent USSR is allowed to grow unchecked next to it. (Not even speaking of the millions of people who will suffer under its authoritarian rule.)


Horseshit.

Making sure every country on earth has nukes is way more likely to cause nukes to be used than beating the russian army out of Ukraine.

First -- Do his nukes even work? Or have they been replaced with cardboard "Nuke Go Here" boxes?

Also -- What's Putin going to nuke? He can try some battlefield nuke, and then have his army march through it? That's assuming that his troops have more than a week of training for "marching through a place we just nuked" Or maybe he'll nuke Kiev? I don't think that'd make much difference in letting russia gain ground. Or maybe Putin is planning on nuking Rotterdam because of the F-16s?

Nukes may make china and india stop supporting him, they may provoke more retaliation from the west. But nukes certainly won't change much unless the plan is to just glass the whole of Ukraine, in which case I'm pretty sure that France or England may accidentally glass Moscow even if the USA doesn't.


> in which case I'm pretty sure that France or England may accidentally glass Moscow even if the USA doesn't.

Currently, it seems the US would rather glass London and Paris if that happened.


My point is that Putin wants to live; he's unlikely to survive Moscow getting glassed, regardless of who does the glassing. So he's unlikely to convert all of Ukraine to a moonscape.

And anything _less_ than glassing Ukraine is unlikely to change Ukraine's behavior or materially affect the special military operation's progress.

Hypothetically, if Ukraine has a breakthrough after a massive collapse of the russian army, nukes will prevent Ukraine from going all the way to Lubyanka Square. But there's no way to use nukes to help the russian invasion any more than a shotgun will help with colon cancer.


Since you’re advocating for increased war funding, I assume you’re not considering diplomatic peace talks as a solution. With that in mind, what does ‘ending the war’ look like to you?

As a follow up, how much do you estimate it would cost? The UK has just announced another £2.26 billion pledge, and we have yet to hear from the EU.


> If Ukraine looks like winning at any point, Putin may escalate to tactical nuclear and we can't risk that.

I don't see why they would do that, seeing how they want to annex this land. Kyiv holds significance cultural importance to Russia.

Ukraine made a foothold in Kursk, but it's looking like Russia will be able to take it back over time.

> What happens then?

Doesn't it look likely that at the very least Russia will annex parts of Ukraine?


Is it the famous "We will give them every support, short of help" line? /s

quote: from "Yes Prime Minister"


No, that is too cynical a take. The UK gives a lot of resources to Ukraine, has offered 'boots on the ground' as part of a peace deal, and is increasing its defence going forward.


[flagged]


Flaggers' accounts should automatically be added to a top comment once a post hit's the flagged threshold and they have flagged more than X articles in the last Y days to publicize if the flagger is prolific and which types of threads they are prolific at flagging.

Just tidying up? OK that's anonymous. Regularly shaping discourse? At least make it visible.


That would be too much transparency for people who also not supper happy with democracy.

They have flagged all recent political posts. Pretending to be apolitical which is comical.

HN has a lot of Russian and Chinese users so stories related to these are very quickly flagged.

I feel like I see a lot more communicating/defending/explaining on Chinese adjacent discussion. Like legit outlaying of reasoned depth to their positions, background, etc that really helped me understand their view. I actually wish there was more of it here even if it gets political. There is so little cross pollination of understanding between the US and China on an average person level.

PRESIDENT (over radio)

As the situation develops, one thing must be understood above all others... People of Gotham, we have not abandoned you.

BLAKE

What does that mean?

GORDON

It means we're on our own.


Since at least Obama, the US has been trying to exit Europe and form a dentent with Russia so they can "pivot to Asia". Europe trying to undermine the US exit from ukraine will be just the excuse trump is looking for to withdraw (the 100,000+ troops, and massive military spending on NATO in the EU, etc.). This means no government in Europe will actually do anything about Ukraine -- the risk to the collapse of NATO is too great.

Ukraine has always been a bit of political theatre for the west, and all Trump is doing is forcing the show to end -- which is one of the real shocks to the system. What is most bitterly disliked by both the public and elite in europe is that they might actually have to do something on behalf of ukraine that risks their own security and, of course, they never will and never would. Europe humiliated as a paper tiger will give Trump no great headlines in european newspapers: this is the real psychological shock.

Trump actually means to end the war, and if that fails, withdraw US support. What a predicament for everyone who wants the war to continue -- they'd actually have to risk something. And hence, this will all be over very quickly.

It's well known the russian elite contain a large pro-western contingent, though the public in russia is not and much more pro-war than the elite. Putin is looking at a way of returning the economic situation to a pre-war state without angering the public -- without it "all being for nothing" and so on. So the deal Trump will offer will be accepted there, and if it isnt accepted in the EU he'll withdraw US support.

There has not been, to my knowledge, a single proposal by the pro-war axis to achieve any other outcome. And of course not, the pro-war sentiment in the west, is a paper-tiger charade to boost their own credibility and punish russia for informing them that the 2000s are over and the USA is not the lone superpower in the system. That Russia (, and china of course) intend to act like the US in their own spheres of influence, and use their militaries to achive political ends. This was only supposed to be a US privilige.

The world is now a game between US, Russia and China -- and the leaders of these nations are looking to rapidly normalize and stablizle relations -- because they are each their significant threats -- everything else is a distraction. Especially the EU, which will do nothing to change that -- indeed: why bother? Sit back and get rich whilst the bullies waste their money in fights.


> Trump actually means to end the war

What he really wants is for Ukraine to surrender its lands to Russia. And he is also unwilling to ask Russia to give any concessions.

We did sign the Budapest memorandum. Ukraine gave up its nukes in exchange for security guarantees from the US. Shame on us for not honoring it.

Also, Ukraine and Europe is not pro-war. They want Russians to go back to their own country. You are calling people who are defending their country from an invader, and their supporters, pro-war axis.


There's a Russian army on that land, so its not entirely clear who would be surrendering it.

I am not against Europe sending in an army if it wishes. I am not against your pro-war position which seeks, via military means, to retake land in Russia's control. I am more pointing out that you're not actually willing to do anything about it. You're not willing to take any risk to your own security.

You can have whatever position you want, but a political slogan isnt a policy -- its not an argument, or a position. It's just some theatrical ploy to make yourself feel better: what is the policy you have (or anyone) to retake the land under russian control? How do you intend to end the war? Ask the school teacher to put Russia in detention?

Trump is withdrawing from Ukraine, there is nothing anyone can do about that. If Europe wishes Ukraine to retain all of its land, and far fewer of its lives, it will have to risk its own security. It will not, nor will you: this is the source of the hatred for trump, it requires people of your mind to act -- and that was never on the table

I'd imagine the US actions might well violate Budapest, but that was extremely watered down at the time from "gaurentees" to "assurances" so its a very weak position to start with. But in any case the world which now exists has three great powers: US, China, Russia. All three are now "pivoting to each other", and away from non-rivaling activity.

If europe doesnt like this, or you don't -- I have no issue with that: go on, do something.

The US is not pivoting back to the EU now, under no administration. Just as Biden retained Trump's pivot against China, the next admin (dem or rep) will retain his piovt from the EU -- since both have been the desire of every president over the last 20+ years.


Russia isn't a great power. Their economy is hollow. They have influence and military power inherited from the Soviet Union, but they don't have the capacity to keep that going, it's been nearly entirely expended on this one jaunt in Ukraine. They have a shrinking population of 144m and have shed their best in the last 2 years. India is a greater power with much more potential energy.

The reason for determining who is a "great power" is systemic, not based on individual country characteristics. India could be much stronger than russia, but if its surrounded by countries that are quite strong, it's hemmed in and not capable of dominating its region and hence not able to rival the real world powers (/ great powers).

A great (or "world") power is one which can leave its region militarily and could withstand an attack from the biggest power in the system (ie., the US).

All world powers see non-world-powers as their instruments: the EU was the US's instrument -- by bribery, threat, and protection racket it would get its own way, enrich itself, etc.

From the pov of these powers only they are soverign: hence vitnam, iraq, afganistan, cuba, etc. Hence the US engaging in a proxy war in ukraine in the first place.

India has pakistan and china to deal with, and its very unclear it can actually leave its area of the world. Hence the US doesnt have to treat it seriously. The only threats (to the US) are the powers that can withstand the US and "go on expiditions" with their militaries in regions that undermine US interests, and so on.

Here the US, mostly quite correctly, believes it can establish a detent with Russia -- but cannot with China. Russia is well-integrated into the western system, and only seeks to dominate a region the US has no interest in. The riskto it from china is far greater. It is very easy to imagine China in the western hemisphere, with a navy in a south american country -- it's nearly impossible to imagine this from India (and its highly unlikely from Russia).

India poses zero risk, nor is it clear it could ever. So regardless of what criteria you use, it will not factor into the thinking of the world powers.

The US in the 90s wanted poland (et al.) to be within its sphere of influence in the EU -- it's own instrument. It got its way. It over-reached trying to bring georgia and ukraine into the system, thinking Russia too weak to do anything about it. Well Russia isnt too weak, it has rebuilt its global status. So the US is running away and trying to reformulate a less ambitious foreign policy which its actually capable of executing


I kinda agree to your general point but it seems awfully shortsighted and narrow in the information it's based upon.

Narrow in the sense that Russia "has rebuilt its global status" while sacrificing many of their global position: security guarantor at Caucasus collapsed with Armenia and Azerbaijan war (something western media was oddly quiet about. Maybe due to the Turkish gass pipeline project), Losing ground in Syria and even report that the their influence in Africa through Wagner etc is not as great as it used to be.

Short sighted in that the take on India is true now, but would've equally applied to China around the time of Deng and it's opening up. It was also that same short sightedness that led US (with Kissinger) to side with Pakistan which is part of the reason you can't really call India aligned to US interest in any meaningful sense.

Sensible analysis, but only based on narrow fact, and ignoring historical context and the fact that those "insignificant parameters(non global power)" stil act on their own interests and more or less have some effect. ignoring that can often blow up in your face.

That's probably why the realists, which I'm assuming you're part of from the way you put things out, while sounding good on paper don't really have a great track record (mainly Kissinger, again.) of successful decision making.

Nothing was learned in the Vietnam failure, and it was repeated in Afghanistan by that line of thoughts.


I think your thinking is short-termist and naive. Naive because:

* Putin will use any pause in fighting that doesn't come with credible security guarantees to rearm and continue (he basically always breaks ceasefires he agrees)

Short-termist because:

* a resurgent Russia and weakened (and alienated) EU will only strengthen China and strategically weaken the US

The USA is powerful but that doesn't mean it can be indifferent to global affairs.

The only plausible rationale for Trump's behaviour is that he doesn't care about liberal democracy, either around the world or at home. If you are a US citizen who doesn't care about their own democracy perhaps that's fine, but if you do believe in the constitution, his behaviour should worry you.


China and Russia are rival powers both seeking some domination over asia (their continent) -- a strong russia will preoccupy china.

As for liberal democracy, only two us presidents in history cared about that for a a brief moment (george bush the latest, woodrow willson the earliest), and that ended in catastrophe.

The US certainly didnt care about democracy in Ukraine when the state department was deciding who should replace the democratically elected leader of ukranine in 2013 (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-26079957 -- you can go find the recording and listen, the media reports are propaganda). Nor did biden care about democracy in UA when he withheld aid in order to have a prosecutor fired (go watch the video of biden, the reporting is propaganda). Nor has the US ever cared about democracy: it does exactly the same across the world -- deposing, blackmailing, threatening democracies all over the world. It even armed al q. in syria just to depose Assad -- the very people who dragged it back into middle eastern wars. Every state which cannot oppose the US is not soverign in the eyes of the US: it must do what it says. Well, now China and Russia are strong enough to do the same.

The US has its sphere of influence: the western hemisphere, europe. And threatens, blackmails, bribes and deposes all of the world to advance its interests. This is the behaviour of a great power -- and Russia has returned to this status.

Unless another great power is willing to contain Russia, there is nothing to be done. Since Russia is not a threat to China or the US at the moment, neither are willing to contain it. And so it goes.

This has very little to do with Trump's personality -- exactly his actions are stated in words by Obama, and every president since Bush: detent with russia, withdrawl from europe, retiring nato, containing china. Trump is just the first to do it. Trump wants peace with rival powers at all costs, hence his "WW3" comments -- the world is now far too risky for the US to impose its will has it had done from 1992 til 2022.

Unfortunately many have grown up in this era and still think an american "deciding" that the world-should-be-some-way is sufficient for it to be that way -- that the US military will be their to impose the will of the western mind. That era is over. It no longer matters what we think -- there's more than one bully in the system.


> It's just some theatrical ploy to make yourself feel better: what is the policy you have (or anyone) to retake the land under russian control? How do you intend to end the war?

Unfortunately there are no easy solutions to these questions (apart from Trump's "solution" to just give Putin everything he wants). Not having anything better, Europe will just continue what it has been doing - sending more munitions, fighter jets, tanks, javelins and whatever is needed as long as Ukraine needs it, hoping that after Putin dies the next leader of Russia will be less bloodthirsty.


Trump isnt trying to solve anything in Ukrine. He's very happy if Europe want to continue the war. He's trying to solve an american problem, which is the US being trapped in europe, spending large amounts there, and otherwise wasting resources on containing the wrong country (Russia).

He will try to impose a peace, as the best outcome for everyone -- if he cannot do that, he will choose the best outcome for america and let europe manage the mess.


> US signed Budapest memorandum. We promised to help defend Ukraine, if it gave up its nukes. Now we are trying to shake them down like a mafia. And also asking them to give in to Putin's demands, without asking Putin to give up anything.

I keep seeing this on HN and it is just plain wrong. Someone should actually bother to read this thing. [0]

> Under the agreement the Russian Federation provided security assurances to Ukraine in the form of promising neither to attack nor to threaten to attack them. The other signatories (the United States, United Kingdom and France) pledged non-military support to Ukraine in exchange for its adherence to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. The memorandum bundled together a set of assurances that Ukraine had already held from the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe (CSCE) Final Act, the United Nations Charter and the Non-Proliferation Treaty but the Ukrainian government found it valuable to have these assurances in a Ukraine-specific document.

> The Budapest Memorandum was negotiated at political level, but it is not entirely clear whether the instrument is devoid entirely of legal provisions. It refers to assurances, but unlike guarantees, it does not impose a legal obligation of military assistance on its parties. According to Stephen MacFarlane, a professor of international relations, "It gives signatories justification if they take action, but it does not force anyone to act in Ukraine." In the US, neither the George H. W. Bush administration nor the Clinton administration was prepared to give a military commitment to Ukraine, and they did not believe the US Senate would ratify an international treaty and so the memorandum was adopted in more limited terms. The memorandum has a requirement of consultation among the parties "in the event a situation arises that raises a question concerning the ... commitments" set out in the memorandum. Whether or not the memorandum sets out legal obligations, the difficulties that Ukraine has encountered since early 2014 may cast doubt on the credibility of future security assurances that are offered in exchange for nonproliferation commitments. Regardless, the United States publicly maintains that "the Memorandum is not legally binding", calling it a "political commitment".

> China and France gave security assurances for Ukraine in separate documents. China's governmental statement of 4 December 1994 did not call for mandatory consultations if questions arose but only for "fair consultations". France's declaration of 5 December 1994 did not mention consultations.

Interesting that China actually signed similar security assurances with Ukraine and is now actively providing military support to Russia without anyone on HN criticizing them.. [1]

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_Memorandum [1]: https://apnews.com/article/united-states-china-russia-ukrain...


> It's well known the russian elite contain a large pro-western contingent, though the public in russia is not and much more pro-war than the elite. Putin is looking at a way of returning the economic situation to a pre-war state without angering the public -- without it "all being for nothing" and so on.

It would be nice if it was true. Someone else might argue that Putin just wants to extend its empire westwards as much as he is allowed to.


Whay does “stand” mean here? Just make statements in public? uk isn’t doing much tbh

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/uk-support-to-ukr...

    £7.8 billion in military support
    £5 billion in non-military support

Which is LOT less than us or german contribution.

Trump made the right move. I've had enough of the wars and proxy wars. Peace is on the table, they should have taken it. So glad I don't live in the UK right now.

The same peace that we got after Crimea was invaded?

It's sweet that you've had enough of the wars, like you might have had enough of a Netflix series.

The peace on the table is no such thing. It's a temporary appeasement of a murderous dictator who is against everything the US used to stand for. Shameful.


America did have leverage to negotiate a serious and unprecedented peace, too. They have the weapons to power-gap Russian equipment, a Navy that could crush Russia's fleet in an hour of surface combat, and enough soldiers to deter even a multi-coalition Russian attack. There are a multitude of ways for America to offer support without putting America at risk.

Abandoning control in the European theater while doubling down on the Levant is like if the USSR announced they forfeit the Cold War to focus on Afghanistan. It is a bloody warpath, dictated by nonsense. Trading one proxy war for another isn't going to save the American economy, or improve American security.


What is the alternative you're proposing here? Russia has nukes. Your hubris will lead you to despair and either endless war or at least one nuclear bomb taking out a city. I'm not trying to be "american", I'm trying to be rational.

Simple, Putin can simply withdraw his troops back to Russia. Instant peace.

That's not on the table. Putin will never do that, were tired of Europe and Ukraine pretending like it is.

As you state, peace with Putin in not on the table. Your way is to grant him his every ambition, whatever that may be (historically taking territory piece by piece, be it in Georgia or Ukraine). The sanner way is to defeat Putin so that he is forced to stop now, not pause and continue his ambition after he heals some wounds. As you admit, Putin will NEVER not carry out his ambitions.

It could absolutely be on the table. The economy of Russia can only take so much of this war. Putin has little choice now. Trump is pretty much the only reason Russia will be able to keep up their attempted invasion.

What exactly is on the table? Putin will just stop? Don't make me laugh. You know his stated aims right?

Looks like we'll have to find out who's right.

Strictly speaking, Ukraine already knows who's wrong. If Russia could be trusted without a security guarantee then the math might add up differently.

There will never be another Minsk agreement though, with or without the US at the table. It's pathetic that any credible military leader would attempt to push that a second time.


Putin has been pushed back for three years without using nukes. Matter of fact, all countries with nuclear weapons have faces wars and even lost some. The sowiets didn't nuke Afghanistan, the USA didn't nuke Vietnam or <insert long list here>, even Israel didn't nuke Iran desite the 1980 classic by Vince Vance & the Valiants: Bomb Iran. Nukes are useless.

I'm not sure if "unilateral disarmament" is "peace".

Russia's got a long history of mulching their subjects, I'm pretty sure "peace" is the peace of the grave, for many souls currently living in Ukraine.

So they're not really heavily incentivized toward peace under the "please dig your own grave" terms on offer.


To get a sense for how Russian occupation would be like, we can just look at the areas they've already occupied.

Mass graves, torture chambers, and the lowest freedom in the whole world.


> I've had enough of the wars and proxy wars...

You have any bright ideas on how to achieve peace that does not involve asking Ukraine to surrender to an invading Russian military and give up the land Russia stole?

Also, would you sing the same tune if somebody invades your country?


That’s an Ukraine problem. The US should never have made overtures for Ukraine joining nato.

There is no “right” for any country to join nato. And Ukraine is not a nato ally.

The way it is currently, this is a forever war on low boil that will continue for ever. All the current situation accomplishes is sale of arms to Ukraine.

The Europeans manufacture good armaments as well. They are more than accomplished to provide whatever aid Ukraine needs.


By that logic the US shouldn't have intervened in Yugoslavia, Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, bombing Serbia etc. But I suppose when Gaddafi tries imposing his of own currency on all oil-sales and Yugoslavia threatens becoming the new superpower of the Balkans then it's fine that they intervene lol. You have no idea what you are talking about.

Yes - Iraq was under false pretenses. The US should never have gone to any of those places. Afghanistan was in response to 9/11. The rest is just adventurism that needs curbing.

Someone comes into your house, takes over half the rooms and tells you that they are theirs, for the sake of being a nice person you just let it pass and also tell them they should also decide what you'll be having for dinner from now on.

This is the peace that is being aksed for Ukraine to accept.


What a backwards thing to say.

Surrender to an oppressor is never peace.


Peace isnt on the table. Esp. not from this Orange Turd.

What peace deal? So far nothing has actually been proposed other than marketing spin on Ukraine surrendering.

> So glad I don't live in the UK right now.

As are we.


Freedom isn’t free.

We support other free nations…. so that we don’t have to fight directly (and alone).


Putin will not stop until he has control over all of Ukraine, by installing a puppet regime similar to Belarus. And then in Moldava as well, if not further. That’s what the Ukraine is fighting to prevent. There is no peace if the Ukrainians don’t retain their freedom. And someone has to guarantee that freedom, against Russia.

Did you listen to what Trump said yesterday?

1. There is no security guarantees. 2. There is no future help if Russia breaks the cease-fire and tries taking Ukraine again. 3. The cease-fire will simply give Russia time to regroup and launch another offensive later. 4. Trump thinks Zelensky is a dictator 5. Zelensky has already offered to step down as president if Trump gave security guarantees.


Zelensky is too good to be a politician. He should never step down, especially for Trump.

I don't know where so many people justify that Europe militarizing is a good outcome. Best case, it's a massive drain on the global economy. Worst case, we are stuffing the powderkeg for WWIII. There's a reason the US was happy to pay more than it's fair share for NATO for so long.

If we start to see tariffs take off internationally, like we did back with the Smoot Hawley tariffs 100 years ago, we are literally recreating the environment that created WWII, this time with Ukraine playing the part of Manchuria.


Is Europe “militarizing” any different than now?

Regardless, I don’t think they’ve been given a choice. And if nobody helps out anyone, you get everyone “militarizing”.


So what are you proposing then? That Russia just takes Ukraine?

The US to continue funding NATO and Ukraine.

But the US doesnt want to. Are u paying attention?

Sadly Trump has ended that as a solution. No one trusts the US's word that it will defend them now. Also, that defence now comes with a 'must kiss the king's ring' and 'protectorates must repay us with us dictating the terms when they are most vulnerable'.

That option is over due to the American electorate. You have to cut the US out to ensure success and further disempowerment of Russia to prevent any further potential for Russia to initiate a conflict. The Russian economy has almost been brought to failure, Europe simply needs the will and resources to get there (EU countries are currently negotiating a €20B military package for Ukraine).

Norwegian fuel supplier refuses U.S. warships over Ukraine - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43223872

> Norwegian fuel company Haltbakk Bunkers has announced it will cease supplying fuel to U.S. military forces in Norway and American ships docking in Norwegian ports, citing dissatisfaction with recent U.S. policy towards Ukraine.


Trump is holding that all hostage and is likely rooting for Russia (or worse). We know he idolizes him.

So, Zelenskyy is supposed to just lay down and give up everything for a lopsided deal that will just hurt them more? The US is just going to take advantage of the entire situation. That’s what we have in power now, opportunists.


The main need for this comes from the rise of China. Specifically, its rise in economic power and military capabilities make is so that 1) the US is no longer able to deter both Russia and China combined, but needs to prioritize China (its main geopolitical rival) and 2) Russia can openly engage in armed conflict without the fear of Western sanctions, as China will keep Russia's economy afloat (mainly via purchase of energy).

With Trump back in the White House there is an additional motivation for EU countries to up their military spending; at best the US is now viewed as a less reliable ally (that may or may not help in the face of conflict), at worst the US will align itself with autocratic regimes to divide up the world in their respective spheres of influence and actively undermine the EU.

So if you accept the premise that democracy (and the liberal, rule-based world order) is worthwhile defending, increased military spending of EU countries is in fact a "good thing" (as in, better than the alternative of submitting to imperialistic authoritarian neighbors).


I agree that increased military spending in Europe is a good thing.. for Europeans but net negative for the world.

Also it's a pretty daft take to think that this sudden armament of Europe is going to help the "contain China" cause. Why would anyone in East/South East Asia now trust USA when they see economics as zero-sum game with military intimidation towards allies as a valid strategy for getting their way. China is doing the latter without the former, and most Asian nations has more to lose economically siding with US to begin with.

Pivot to China have been the long running goal since Obama but why it took long time is because of dynamics like this. Just to on a whim in less than 2 month destroying all that. I can't imagine how this can be spun as a win, even with outlined goals of yours.

Yeah good luck containing China when all their neighbors are now not sure about American commitment anymore. If I'm a Asian politician I'd probably just start nuke development and declare neutrality and ride this one out.

Global free trade, which have benefitted all of Asia (including China) is not something US is supporting anymore anyway


The worst thing for European security is for europe to become a military rival to Russia (, the US, China). This is a likely to be an increasinly popular desire for the publics of europe now that the US is withdrawing, but it's a dangerous trap -- the upside is that you retain a seat at the table, the downside is you will be grinding down your population in wars and military spending.

The german model was the european model: spend almost nothing on defense, let the US provide the nukes, sit back and get rich.

One reason this model may fail is the UK and France -- both are expeditionary forces (the UK where-ever the US is, and france in africa) trying to play at being a great power. This only ever worked because the US was prepared to bail them out whenever anything bad happened (cf. Libya). Without the US, both nations may try to drive towards EU military unification and hence genuine great power status.

Good luck balancing the Chinese, Russia and US defense budgets. Europe's spending will be crippled, just as the US's is -- without global currency status to prop it up.


> One reason this model may fail is the UK and France

Another reason is a bi-polar American president that can withdraw from NATO tomorrow effectively leaving Europe on its own. Europe has no other choice, they need to spend more on defense if they want to keep the war at bay.


No, the worst thing for European security would be to not have enough military strength to stop Putin if he decides he wants Poland (as prominent Russians have said they should take, after Ukraine). And then East Germany, and Chechia, and Slovakia, and Hungary. And then who knows if he would decide he is done?

Not being able to defend yourself is strictly worse for security than being able to defend yourself. I don't know how you can think otherwise.


I'm quite sure sufficient resources exist in Ukraine to rapidly build Thermonuclear weapons to stave off Russia. It wouldn't surprise me if someone else supplied a few covertly to hold off the Tyrant.

How would that possibly work without Russia turning all Ukraine cities into nuclear wasteland in retaliation?

Mutual Assured Destruction.... a tried and true method for holding off Armageddon. Especially frightening for Putin is the possibility of nuclear armed Ukrainian sympathizers loose inside of Russia.



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