@ZoestandswithUkraine You mean like every time I get pinged in SOCVR? ;-)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Fun linguistic nitpick: this is actually wrong. The past participial form of "wake up" is "waked up". As in: Today, I wake up. Yesterday, I woke up. This week, I have waked up.
There is, in fact, a word "woken", but it's the past participial of "wake" (no "up").
Russia has been using mercenaries for decades. It's not something unique to Ukraine or new to Ukraine.
Mercenaries were key to Russia's seizure of the Crimean Peninsula back in 2014. Why would anyone in the US or elsewhere expect this to be any different?
And, yes, surely Ukraine is also recruiting mercenaries. Again, why would they not?
The concern is that, under certain definitions of "mercenary", Ukraine's use of them could violate international law, due to treaties that it is a signatory to but Russia is not?
You mean that Russia exclusively used "regular army" in the invasion of the Crimean Peninsula? That's just wrong.
Look up the Wagner Group.
Russia has been using them since at least the Crimean invasion in 2014. They've shown up all over the place since then, from Syria to Mali, and, of course, Ukraine.
Naturally, Russian officials deny this, but why would you expect anything else from a self-interested party that has absolutely no ethical scruples or standards anyway?
And, I mean, if you're trying to point out that the US and other actors have done unjustifiable things internationally multiple times in the past, I'm certainly not going to contest that.
I have rarely agreed with my country's foreign policy.
She was the lead US official in supporting the Ukrainian Revolution of Dignity.
Not sure what relevance that has.
If you're saying that the US "caused" the Russian invasion of Ukraine because we had previously supported demonstrators trying to move Ukraine out of Russia's sphere of influence, uh...
I have no words to reply to that. It's too stupid for words.
If we'd have just let Russia continue to control them, Russia wouldn't have to have invaded them to re-establish control?
The North Atlantic Cooperation Council was established in 1991, shortly after the fall of the Soviet Union. This facilitated relations between NATO and the Russian Federation.
Putin just wants to bring back the perceived glory of the Soviet Union, much like Hitler wanted to bring back the perceived glory of Germany prior to World War I.
The historical argument is very weak. For pretty much any place in Europe, there have been at least 10 "owners". Picking one arbitrarily to be "the true owner" is only done by said owner to push their claim.
But yeah, you're right, 1569 isn't far enough back. It'd be better to give Ukraine to Italy, since the Republic of Genoa (which is now part of Italy) founded colonies in what is now Ukraine and transformed them into large commercial centers in the 13th century.
Yes, if we gave Putin everything he wanted, then he might have been happier. For a while.
Do you also think that the refusal of the Allies to give in to Hitler's demands "caused" World War II?
If I demand something you don't want me to give me, and then I do something bad because I'm angry I didn't get it, it doesn't transfer responsibility to you because you declined to give me what I want.
That's a gross oversimplification of all the events and factors that factored into Hitler getting into power to just be the responsibility of one particular power or nation.
I can't handle XY questions. They drive me up the wall. It's like somebody asking for a help driving a nail into a wooden board with a hammer but they aren't holding a hammer, they are holding a fish. If other people have problems with their actual hammers in the future, finding advice like "don't use a fish" doesn't help them. And fish users rarely phrase their problem correctly "Board doesn't accept nail" or "nail too slippery" is what they ask about.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Don't drag us into this garbage. Nobody here would say woken like that. We use woken for things like "I've only woken up recently", not just in place of woke.
The only reason I didn't comment on it before is because I thought you were correcting "have you woke up recently?" to "have you woken up recently?", not because you actually thought "I've woken up a couple of hours ago" was correct, because it's not :p
@manro if we are to go by that definition, we have to give Russia as a whole to UA because historically it's their territory. Are you aware that Kiev is basically the founding city?
@manro and Russian Empire is not Russia, exactly. If you want to go with the "historical territory" argument, you need to take into account things like this, because otherwise it's arbitrary bullshit (which it is).
also, by that logic, Sweden has a good claim on Vyborg
"historical territory" is the most bullcrap argument I heard by any country's propaganda
oh, native Americans also would like a significant chunk of the US back too
@manro That isn't actually relevant, in the same way that the British Empire is not Britain. Just because the Russian Empire was named the Russian Empire does not mean they are the same thing.
@NickstandswithUkraine precisely - even legally current Russia is not considered to be a successor of the Empire (neither was USSR). It is considered legally a successor to USSR only - that's why we inherited (and paid out back when there was an intention to successfully integrate with the rest of the world) its enormous debt.
@manro it might come as a shock, but "potency" is not defined by conquest - I'd actually call any leadership that wants to "make X great again" im-potent.
What I know is there is a conquest by a regime that is hell-bent on staying in power by pandering to "patriotic" feelings while the economy crumbles because of sheer incompetency, lack of democratic processes, etc
yea, ofc. Frankly, unless the system crumbles like USSR did, there's little chance for improvement as everyone that could understand the benefits of cooperation is either (a) dead; (b) abroad
I want to be able to say "I am from Russia" without it meaning "I am from a war-mongering country with no freedom of speech, no elections, crumbling economy, etc"
@manro you clearly miss out on all the countries that do not have even a fraction of military force but are respected because their economy, values, and political systems are a net benefit for the humanity. Not this.