Russian invasion of Ukraine | Fewer tweets, more discussion

The US went so far as creating sanctions against Germany because of Nord Stream. They would love to destroy it and have been the secondary suspect for the German public since day one.
I can see why the US might want to destroy Nord Stream, but I would expect that if Russia really thought they had then Russia would milk the situation propaganda-wise and threaten all kinds of retaliation on US infrastructure if anything similar happened again. All Russia has done is deny their own involvement, which is suspicious for me.

I've no idea who did it, just trying to follow your thoughts through.
 
This is such a strange and abstract way of looking at war. Yes everyone agrees that war is horrible and humans are utter twats for perpetrating it but, as has already been explained to you, 'peace' is not a universal term. The peace that follows and indeed the relationships between warring states post war, depends on how the war has gone. The 'peace' that has been ongoing since the annexation of Crimea for instance and conflict in Georgia has led us to where we are now.

Ukraine isn't fighting on because of some weird fetishisation of war and love of the fact that their cities and infrastructure is being destroyed, they're fighting because the nature of their country is at risk. Perhaps they'll ultimately 'lose' (which of course may mean different things for different people) but very few people will accept an unjust peace. In those circumstances, it breeds resentment, which inevitably leads to conflict down the line, either in terms of traditional conflict (ie WW1, WW2) or asymmetrical warfare (Gulf War 2, Israel/Palestine, Soviet Afghan war) etc etc.

I think Ukraine will feel that they've already tried your tactic of not escalating and seeing how Russia respond back in 2014 and its gotten them to this current spot.
Good post.
 
It means that peace is the only victory - end result - which ever has been brought about by war. It's all that "victory" ever is (even including every scenario of "total defeat").
That's not true. Victory is far more than the absence of war/ thecreation of peace. It is also the nature of the peace itself that matters. Compare how Germany came out of WW2 with how Russia came out of the Cold War. Which peace turned out better?
 
I never said it was. Again, being from Northern Ireland, you object to the parallel not because it isn't true insofar as consociationalism and peace goes, but because you think NI so particular that it cannot transcend your personal experience of it in structural, and general, terms (which it does).

How, you've just repeated the same truth I've stated and then disagreed with it? All wars to ever have been fought, all mass murder events as it goes wherein rape and somehow even worse are normalized and people often get medals for it, (do it for money in normal conditions, and you get a heavier setenence), well, they have all ended in peace. All wars currently fought will end the same way. That is the only "victory" you can achieve in a false-state called "war" but which in actuality is "mass murder normalized", "rape", "abuse of every kind", and all for power "games" and "profit".

Thousands of years we've been putting up with this. About time it ended, I think.

Someone said it was nice that I looked at it from a "humanitarian" point of view. I think it's tragic that the truth of the matter is considered "humanitarian" with overtones of "naivety". For, in reality, you have lost all sense of truth and are become as a nihlist if you think the above to be humanitarian in any sense other than "true description of war".

Using big words doesn't make you sound more clever, it just sounds like you're trying to hide the fact your argument is a load of bollocks. Furthermore the surfeit of "quotation marks" is both a highly unstylish way of writing and simultaneously very patronising I think.

If you'd tried to draw a parallel between for example Israel and Northern Ireland I would have entirely been on board, I think there are a lot of parallels, as well as obviously some key differences. Simply using the fact there has been fighting in two regions doesn't make it useful or interesting to draw any type of parallel between them.
 


Definetly bizzare seeing the sort of drone I enjoy building being used in a warzone.

'Low Battery' betaflight software
 
Ukraine isn't fighting on because of some weird fetishisation of war
it is, as it goes, though I don't say Ukraine is responsible. for by what other means does russia invade? and by what other means is that invasion made acceptable except via the very same propaganda apparatus which makes mass murder, rape, and so forth, seem like something other than it is? that ukraine responds to it, rather than initiates, doesn't mean it isn't fighting against the same thing (which the Russians didn't invent either, but which they certainly make use of).

it's not a weird way of looking at it. War is insane. It's car-crash-economy made to appear as something else. anyone who views war as something other than that, or tries to pursuade people it is other than mass-murder, is the one who is truly lost (for now, anyway).

it hasn't changed since Orwell wrote about it. and it was true before Orwell, too.
 
That's not true. Victory is far more than the absence of war/ thecreation of peace. It is also the nature of the peace itself that matters. Compare how Germany came out of WW2 with how Russia came out of the Cold War. Which peace turned out better?
(in war) victory is the absence of war. you get there either by negotiation before total defeat or by neogitations which avoid the necessity of total defeat. what has been the aim of any state to ever go to war except to establish peace (on their terms)? i don't know of any. that would include the tyrannies as well as the democracies. i.e., remove the idea of "victory as the imposition of peace [on "our" terms]" and what else has ever been the aim of war? or the result?

take this case. for the Russians, peace would have been the imposition of their will upon Kyiv. control without the necessity of war (if all agree that Putin expected a repeat of 2013/14 which seems to orthodox opinion, but true even if that wasn't the case, you just add "without necessity for further war").* for the Ukrainians, it is clearly not that. but the countering of that exact force which leads to the idea, literally manifest, of "peace is victory on our terms which sees us regain that which Russia has taken".

* which is a Russian ideal of total defeat insofar as they sought/seek to control Kyiv and thus defeat that regime.
well, i'm not trying to sound clever. i didn't invent the truth, nor do i own it. i just referenced orwell. he didn't use "big words" but he did address their usage. i don't take this to be personal, but many others do. i.e., a structural way of countering my argument, would be better placed rather than "bollocks" or whatever else just goes back to some idealized form of the person you have rather than the content of the argument itself.

How can Russia, for example, invade Ukraine (or anywhere else) except that the idea of “invasion” and “war” are “thinkable” rather than “unthinkable”? How, except insofar as everyone is inculcated, regardless of nationality, into a false economic mode, is any such invasion made possible? In a sane world, none of these things would exist as anything other than a history which has been left behind. They would be no more normal than burning witches at the stake. No more normal than – and analogies run out because nothing is as insane as war. It cannot be compared. All the horrors of the world are present in one cancerous centripetal force wherein all the world’s capital is pulled, directly or indirectly, and thus infected (socially, too, for capital is always social even when it appears other). Well, the distinction is simple. If war is “there” (distant) it is also, by ordinal factor, “here” (not distant at all). And you see it in internal divisions of all body politics not directly involved in war but indirectly involved for they cannot but be other. You see it in this discussion. That is how capital works, and how society works insofar as it is infected by the disease, which is war-economy, but not how it need work. It doesn't even make sense in capital terms, looking some twenty years down the line (or even ten).

I'm not trying to sound clever. If that's how it comes across, it isn't intentional. Whatever truth there is in the above is not mine. I've taken it from other people, many, who have worked longer and harder at it than I have. It's also common sense. But above all else, I don't come here to rile people up. That, unfortunately, is also just what war does even when we don't necessarily even disagree. It's madness.

And just on the cyncial note, think it was Africanspur. I'm not that cyncial. I take the opposite view. I believe people, the overwhelming majority, are good. Even tyrants produce excuses when they go to war to rationalize it to their own people. If most people were not good, even those living under tyrannies, you would see no such justifications or attempts to propagandize. The tyrant would simply go to war and expect no objection. In this case, the very fact that Putin made excuses, for example, tells you something (good) about the majority of people in Russia. That they don't like war and must be lied into consenting, tacitly or explictly. And that generally holds for most wars, too.
 
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it is, as it goes, though I don't say Ukraine is responsible. for by what other means does russia invade? and by what other means is that invasion made acceptable except via the very same propaganda apparatus which makes mass murder, rape, and so forth, seem like something other than it is? that ukraine responds to it, rather than initiates, doesn't mean it isn't fighting against the same thing (which the Russians didn't invent either, but which they certainly make use of).

it's not a weird way of looking at it. War is insane. It's car-crash-economy made to appear as something else. anyone who views war as something other than that, or tries to pursuade people it is other than mass-murder, is the one who is truly lost (for now, anyway).

it hasn't changed since Orwell wrote about it. and it was true before Orwell, too.
This reads like something produced by a word randomizer, you must have done really well at uni when it came to hitting the number of words for the essays.
 
Imagine quoting Orwell not for denouncing totalitarisms, but for advocating a ceasefire strategically convenient to a totalitarian regime.

That's not true. Victory is far more than the absence of war/ thecreation of peace. It is also the nature of the peace itself that matters. Compare how Germany came out of WW2 with how Russia came out of the Cold War. Which peace turned out better?

This. Not any peace is neccesarily desirable. That's esentially why wars exist. And this particular war will continue until one side achieves its goals, one side capitulates, or if there's no resources or will to fight anymore.
 
I can see why the US might want to destroy Nord Stream, but I would expect that if Russia really thought they had then Russia would milk the situation propaganda-wise and threaten all kinds of retaliation on US infrastructure if anything similar happened again. All Russia has done is deny their own involvement, which is suspicious for me.

I've no idea who did it, just trying to follow your thoughts through.
Yep, Russia is definitely the prime suspect, it's very unlikely that someone else would be responsible.
 
This reads like something produced by a word randomizer, you must have done really well at uni when it came to hitting the number of words for the essays.

That post was a great example of saying a huge amount without actually saying anything at all
 
it is, as it goes, though I don't say Ukraine is responsible. for by what other means does russia invade? and by what other means is that invasion made acceptable except via the very same propaganda apparatus which makes mass murder, rape, and so forth, seem like something other than it is? that ukraine responds to it, rather than initiates, doesn't mean it isn't fighting against the same thing (which the Russians didn't invent either, but which they certainly make use of).

it's not a weird way of looking at it. War is insane. It's car-crash-economy made to appear as something else. anyone who views war as something other than that, or tries to pursuade people it is other than mass-murder, is the one who is truly lost (for now, anyway).

it hasn't changed since Orwell wrote about it. and it was true before Orwell, too.

OK I mean.....that's great but what does that have to do with my post or indeed your initial points?

Nobody is saying war isn't insane. Nobody is saying that war isn't mass murder. Of course it bloody is. You have maybe one or two nutters on here who genuinely seem to enjoy the war porn but 99.99% of people on here will think war is crap and insane. However, Ukraine did not choose to enter this war, nor the annexation, nor the SE conflict since 2014.

Most people however quite rightly make a distinction in terms of the morality of such actions if they're being done as a war of aggression (and perhaps even conquest), compared to a war of independence or a defensive war.

So that's perhaps why it feels like a bit of a pile on because, despite very verbose posts, it's not particularly clear what your point is. That war is bad? No disagreement there. That almost all wars inevitably lead to some kind of peace? Again sure. But there could have been peace in 1940 if Europe just put down their arms against Germany. There was peace after Rome crushed the Carthaginians and destroyed their capital city and civilisation for good. There was peace once the Europeans wiped out enough of the native Americans so that they couldn't fight back anymore. Probably not a peace any of those groups were happy with though?

If your overarching point is that those who think peace can only be achieved following a total Ukraine victory are misplaced, then you may have a point. That may of course be preferable, it may be what would be better for Eastern European countries, the baltics etc, for a lasting peace. But it may not be realistic. Then I'd understand. But your point seems altogether much more abstract and over arching than that?
 
I said structurally. Two groups of people hating each other. Pretty similiar. The reaction is expected. Not so many South Africans here, but would have expected them to say the same thing.

btw, it was literally a sectarian civil war. catholic became shorthand for repulican and protestant for unionist. the contrast i was making was the consociational peace deal which will be mirrored in the end in at least Crimea if not the other two states, as well.

They're not similar at all, you don't seem to understand the nature of the conflict in Northern Ireland known as the troubles. It was a 'civil war' in a sense but there was much more nuance to it than that which there's no need to go into in this thread. There are also no similarities between the Good Friday Agreement which ended the troubles and any potential peace talks between Ukraine and Russia.

The war in Ukraine started by Russia's invasion isn't a civil war in any way shape or form. And from it's start it's primarily been about Russia trying to assert dominance over Ukraine and it's people. Plus probably an effort to steal more of Ukraine's territory to make a land bridge to Crimea.
 
I'm going to build a hotel in Dubai that caters to Russian oligarchs by providing perfectly safe windowless hotel rooms.
 
Someone said it was nice that I looked at it from a "humanitarian" point of view. I think it's tragic that the truth of the matter is considered "humanitarian" with overtones of "naivety". For, in reality, you have lost all sense of truth and are become as a nihlist if you think the above to be humanitarian in any sense other than "true description of war".
Seeing as there haven't been a year when some (quite substantial) part of humanity haven't been at war yet I'd say that the idea to end all wars is more of an utopia than "the truth of the matter". It doesn't mean that we shouldn't strive for it but it's certainly not something that we have been able to achieve as of now.
 
Is there a word for it when someone gets stoned, goes all abstract/philosophical and won't shut up?
 
Seeing as there haven't been a year when some (quite substantial) part of humanity haven't been at war yet I'd say that the idea to end all wars is more of an utopia than "the truth of the matter". It doesn't mean that we shouldn't strive for it but it's certainly not something that we have been able to achieve as of now.
I don't think it is utopian. You could just as easily say there hasn't been a year when we weren't polluting the world with carbon monoxide from combustion enginees. That the latter will stop, eventually, isn't utopian but simple and true economic reality. The easiest way to strive for it, is just to remember what it is when you talk about it. As simple as it sounds, that's the truth. To not let it be presented in terms other than it is (mass murder for war, eventual species death for climate change/emissions). That shouldn't offend anyone here for the mass murder event wasn't started by Ukraine?

If your overarching point is that those who think peace can only be achieved following a total Ukraine victory are misplaced, then you may have a point. That may of course be preferable, it may be what would be better for Eastern European countries, the baltics etc, for a lasting peace. But it may not be realistic. Then I'd understand. But your point seems altogether much more abstract and over arching than that?
Partially. In this conflict, that's definitely part of the point. But not something I'm going to insist on because it should have been done already inasmuch as it was there to be done. That it hasn't just points to issues with it on every side. I.e., no one is ready yet, they're going to continue until they feel like they, each I'd guess, has a better platform to negotiate.

But aside from that, the overarching point had to do with someone's reply who questioned whether war ever ended in something other than victory and if victory was ever anything other than "peace" (on the terms of whomever imposes it). It's not that abstract. It would be more abstract if it weren't general and generally true. It was only abstract here because the person asked a question that could not but be returned except in abstract terms. (What is "war" and what is "peace").

isn't a civil war
That wasn't the point. I referenced it not for the Northern Ireland-specifc value but that part of it which is universal. It's as if someone brought up World War Two as a comparison for Putin and someone else said "You do realize that we're talking about two different wars". Yes, the person who makes that comparison understands that, too, I think. They aren't saying it's the same thing, they're saying there's an overlap insofar as they make the comparison. I never said, for example, that this was a civil war. That's a willful misreading of my post. Or I might just have written it poorly?

Imagine quoting Orwell not for denouncing totalitarisms, but for advocating a ceasefire strategically convenient to a totalitarian regime.
No one has done that.

This is a "straw man" (many times over). Where it's easier to attack a fake constructed version of the person giving an argument than it is to deal with the very basic arguments being made. Orwell's argument, by the way, wasn't restricted solely to totalitarian regimes. It was also a warning to democracies. But this really is abstract now?

Just finally, this idea that "big words" and "verbosity" is somehow bad is surely the most self-depricating thing you can post. These aren't big words. No one here is stupid. It just becomes a way of trying to deal with the person and thus avoid the point, even if you could just as quickly dispatch the point. I'll never understand that. You run yourselves down and try to form solidarity along the premise that "we can't understand these words" even though none of them requires a degree in physics or even a degree in literature. I've quoted many who have gone for the point and tried, generally, to avoid anyone who has gone for a falsely constructed idea of the person (strawman) delivering the point.
 
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I don't think it is utopian. You could just as easily say there hasn't been a year when we weren't polluting the world with carbon monoxide from combustion enginees.
You could say that but then you’d be lying.
 
You could say that but then you’d be lying.
That all war will end? I think it will. I'm not looking at next year, or the next five years, but ten or thirty down the line. Seems to me that the way the economy is going to go, there isn't any necessity, or excuse, for keeping it. I don't see the next generations accepting it, the same way many in previous generations didn't accept segregation. Would have seemed utopian to say that the United States could have a black president, too, or any number of things which have happened but seemed, at a point, to be beyond happening.

Whatever a person's individual opinions here, I doubt anyone would argue that we're looking at the emergence of a new world order. And that, you could argue again, and it has been, on the previous pages, this war cannot be removed from that order, depending on which interpretation you take. Even if we say, it was "against" democracy that Putin invaded, or "against" (the death of) the petro-economy, it all points to an order that is emerging and reactionary tendencies in various states to accept that order. But if the order is true, or generally good, which I think it is, and will become more obviously so in years to come, then even the reactionary states will accept it. Like post-USSR collapse except this time I don't see any hegemony surviving nor a multipolar world order being the alternative.
 
That all war will end? I think it will. I'm not looking at next year, or the next five years, but ten or thirty down the line. Seems to me that the way the economy is going to go, there isn't any necessity, or excuse, for keeping it. I don't see the next generations accepting it, the same way many in previous generations didn't accept segregation. Would have seemed utopian to say that the United States could have a black president, too, or any number of things which have happened but seemed, at a point, to be beyond happening.
No, I was answering to the very literal point that you’ve made and I made sure to quote it.

As for the idea that all wars will end at some point — you may believe that, you may not but even you state that this is clearly not something that’s going to happen now or anytime soon (so it’s not really relevant to the discussion about the ongoing conflict). The wars will end, if you want to argue inside the economical discourse, when we won’t have to fight for resources — and the future where humanity literally has every resource that it needs can and usually is described as utopian.
 
The wars will end, if you want to argue inside the economical discourse, when we won’t have to fight for resources — and the future where humanity literally has every resource that it needs can and usually is described as utopian.
Yes, but anything which can be, is better, but isn't, has, generally, been called "utopian". When the new economic order presents itself, and the necessity for foreign power declines, relative to control of resources, I do, indeed, believe that you will see exactly what you refer to, except I don't take it as utopian. It just makes far too much capital sense. It's an economical discourse, yes, but it just refers back to what is true in the most capitalist of senses; the idea that you can trade and that every state will have a roughly equivalent means of production, and government which reflects this (despite obvious geographical differences). I see that coming. If you think it utopian, that's fair enough. I don't. It's either that emerges or we die, in the long-term, and despite everything I think history demonstrates that whilst we get pulled back into events like these, and often spend a decade or more arguing something simple, we do generally tend to evolve. But only when the economic means present themselves. Which will happen over the next decade but, you're right, aren't all that obvious now.

So I can see where your critique comes from because it's an obvious one and I don't deny it must seem utopian. But, again, it's only utopian insofar as it is beyond the possibility of happening. And this isn't (I'm not looking at the world holding hands around a tree and dancing, only trading along a generally established baseline which respects national integrity but also overlaps with a supranational economic mode). Marxist in its analysis, but neo-liberal(ish) in its outlook. I.e., "you cannot speculate on these things [in which war is one of those things]" but speculate away on all the rest. It will make too much sense, even to the richest, for it not to happen.

But I take your point. Until I can show you what I mean, which could be a long time, (I'm waiting for it to come from elsewhere, but Ukraine/Russia is one bellweather), then it will seem as if it is utopian. That's fair enough.
 
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Heard multiple accounts now of Russian ammo shortages around Bakhmut, nice to see after the constant stories of Ukranian shortages and lackluster western efforts to supply.

Although, its not the first time we've heard this sort of thing. What followed next in Kharkiv and Kherson was a general Russian retreat, though I don't think AFU is prioritising this area, just holding the line there.

 
When the new economic order presents itself, and the necessity for foreign power declines, relative to control of resources, I do, indeed, believe that you will see exactly what you refer to, except I don't take it as utopian. It just makes far too much capital sense. It's an economical discourse, yes, but it just refers back to what is true in the most capitalist of senses; the idea that you can trade and that every state will have a roughly equivalent means of production, and government which reflects this (despite obvious geographical differences). I see that coming.
In any way, I adore your optimism and obviously hope that you're right and I (and other doomers) am wrong. Still, as much as I want to believe, say, Pinker's ideas of enlightenment & rationality eventually eliminating war & conflicts altogether in his particular case a lot of data is cherry-picked to fit the argument and I haven't seen any other research of similar caliber that would show that we are at least on the way to getting rid of senseless violence.

I'm also not a fan of picking just one discourse to discuss global stuff like economics — for example you've had a wonderful video on YouTube that explained Russian invasion to Ukraine from an entirely economical perspective (explaining some insightful stuff about gas & oil reserves and delivery routes) but it completely missed the fact that Russia has crippled itself economically (both directly and indirectly) in a way that's never going to be compensated back by that supposed future income (that will never happen but even if it did). This was wasn't started because of economy and Putin has shoved economical (and other rational) reasons aside many times already... so we can't expect this war to end because it doesn't make any economical sense.
 
Citing people familiar with the investigation, Spiegel reported that a Western intelligence agency had found material in Moscow's possession that came from the BND and contained intelligence on Russia.

The suspected double agent was the head of a unit in the BND's technical reconnaissance department, Spiegel said.

 
In any way, I adore your optimism and obviously hope that you're right and I (and other doomers) am wrong. Still, as much as I want to believe, say, Pinker's ideas of enlightenment & rationality eventually eliminating war & conflicts altogether in his particular case a lot of data is cherry-picked to fit the argument and I haven't seen any other research of similar caliber that would show that we are at least on the way to getting rid of senseless violence.
Yeah, it all remains to be seen. Though I would say this: there can be no englightenment insofar as war-economy accounts for 2% of the world's GDP for that means, simply, that we say, and I understand the reasons it is said, "this is acceptable" (the reasons always having to do with any given state's national security which typically just refers back to capital). Anyway, we are pre-enlightenment insofar as war continues except as anything but an exception (as exceptional as someone being burned alive because they are a witch, for example). If I didn't see it, I wouldn't be optimistic. If I didn't see the economic conditions present to dispatch the perceived necessity of foreign imposition instead of a simple, but far more effective, trade-based equilibrium. But it's also true that without me demonstrating that which I see, it's very difficult for people to understand what I am saying. So, I too await someone of necessary calibre to formulate the argument. There to be done, but it must be - I would think - an economist or polymath who goes about it.

But I think we agree on the principle but disagree on its certainty, which is good enough for me!
 
That wasn't the point. I referenced it not for the Northern Ireland-specifc value but that part of it which is universal. It's as if someone brought up World War Two as a comparison for Putin and someone else said "You do realize that we're talking about two different wars". Yes, the person who makes that comparison understands that, too, I think. They aren't saying it's the same thing, they're saying there's an overlap insofar as they make the comparison. I never said, for example, that this was a civil war. That's a willful misreading of my post. Or I might just have written it poorly?

I'm aware on both points. Which highlights the point I was making that these two conflicts are barely comparable.