Comment by the_gipsy

Comment by the_gipsy 3 days ago

45 replies

America is on a isolation downward spiral.

Russia will conquer Ukraine, any other prediction at this point is absurd.

See point one, America is alone now, it will take decades to repair the damage.

tim333 3 days ago

In March 2022 Russia occupied 27% of Ukraine. They have now lost much of their artillery tanks and then army and now control 19% of Ukraine while their oil refineries blow up, and recently tankers. I'm not sure the conquest is going quite to plan.

pfdietz 3 days ago

Some would dispute the "downward" part there.

Not trying to be the world's policeman would allow tremendous downsizing of the military and its associated expense.

Decoupling and isolation is a very rational response if nuclear proliferation is going to accelerate, in order to avoid having entangling alliances pull the country into a nuclear equivalent of the first World War.

  • the_gipsy 3 days ago

    "World's policeman", that's what you tell little kids America was doing. America didn't invade Iraq or Afghanistan for world peace. There were strong economic and strategic motives behind those invasions.

    At the same time, soft power is also vanishing.

    • pfdietz 3 days ago

      Strategic motivation? If one assumes the US is going to be globally involved, yes, but that's begging the question.

      Economic motivation? Not so much now, with the US being a dominant oil producer, and with petroleum itself losing importance. Even then, it's questionable if this could justify the full cost of the US military.

      I think the original motivation was two fold: it was a combination of some sort of moral obligation to defend the "free world" from authoritarians, and (after WW2) a desire to keep small countries (and recent WW2 enemies) from deciding their only option for defense was their own nuclear deterrent.

      • amanaplanacanal 3 days ago

        I don't see much evidence that's the US wants to defend the world from authoritarians. Some of their closest allies are authoritarian countries.

    • tim333 3 days ago

      "strong economic and strategic motive" behind Afghanistan? They did it to get Bin Laden basically.

      America are like a slightly corrupt and violent world police.

      • torginus 3 days ago

        So they invaded Afghanistan to grab a Saudi national hanging out in Pakistan?

bildung 3 days ago

> Russia will conquer Ukraine, any other prediction at this point is absurd.

Are you sure? They are advancing, sure, put look what they paid for to achieve this: 300k dead, 700k wounded, depletion of their souvereign wealth fund, 20%+ inflation, lower oil production and so on.

  • watwut 3 days ago

    Unfortunately, yes. USA is doing everything but openly support Russia at this point too. It could have been different if Ukraine got proper support, but instead it is being undermined.

    Europe could do more, but at least most states dont play for Russia (Hungary and Slovakia excepted).

    • tim333 3 days ago

      I think we may be at peak Trump though which will limit his power to bail out Putin. The midterms won't go well, the Epstein stuff is embarrassing, the Republicans are starting to get unruly.

      • jacquesm 3 days ago

        It's going to be a very long 12 months though.

  • master_crab 3 days ago

    Yeah, it wouldn't be a bad bet to wager this is going to be a Pyrrhic victory for Russia.

  • Ray20 2 days ago

    > They are advancing, sure, put look what they paid for to achieve this: 300k dead, 700k wounded, depletion of their souvereign wealth fund, 20%+ inflation, lower oil production and so on.

    Russia is a totalitarian dictatorship led by the communist Putin. As if communist dictators care. Look at North Korea, it's just the results of an unremarkable year.

    • jacquesm 2 days ago

      Putin is a lot but he is not a communist.

      • Ray20 a day ago

        He is literally a communist, and was a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union until the very end of that party's existence.

        • jacquesm a day ago

          I have a bridge to sell...

          Putin is a kleptocrat and a murderer.

  • somenameforme 3 days ago

    I think literally nobody knows the price either side is paying right now. And I do mean literally, including Trump, Putin, and Zelensky. The fog of war applies to participants, let alone outsiders who are basing our views on figures and claims that obviously going to be driven heavily by propaganda.

    But beyond this, I don't think this war is about Ukraine anymore than a war in Taiwan will be about Taiwan. It's little more than a proxy for hegemony in both cases. Russia did not want NATO parked in their Achille's heel of the Ukrainian flatlands. NATO did, and we pushed forward against endless threats of it being a redline, essentially as a means of indirectly imposing our will on Russia and establishing a hierarchy of dominance.

    And similarly, for those that don't the Taiwan-China history - the Mao led Chinese revolution was a success. The existing government of mainland China fled to Taiwan where they brutally oppressed the locals, in an era known as the 'white terror' [1], and established power through 40 years of martial law. And of course we backed them, solely to use them as a weapon against China, because geopolitics.

    This is why these wars are so important for the participants. The US couldn't care less about Ukraine, but withdrawing without ruining our ability to militarily threaten other peer or near peer countries is difficult. And similarly the last thing Russia needs is more land, but if they never act on claims of red lines, then they can never expect their interests to be considered in the case of a conflict in interests between them and the West.

    [1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Terror_(Taiwan)

    • tim333 3 days ago

      I don't agree on the Russia Ukraine motivations. Ukraine is not part of NATO and was not going to become part of NATO. There were already two NATO countries bordering Russia near Moscow and St P if NATO had wanted to invade which they had no thoughts of doing. Russia lies constantly on this stuff. I think they basically regarded Ukraine their land as part of the Russian empire they were restoring.

      • somenameforme 3 days ago

        It's not about immediate intentions, but about strategic options. Imagine Russia decided to form a military alliance with Mexico with the expected intention of deploying weapons on the Mexican border. If Mexico agreed to this, it would take approximately 0 seconds before the US invaded them under some whimsical pretext (drug gangs probably) and overthrew their government to prevent this. In fact this is, more or less, what the Cuban Missile Crisis was where we were willing to bring the world to the brink of nuclear annihilation over it, and that was an even lighter weight version of this event since there isn't even a land route from Cuba to the US obviously!

        But in this scenario would you think Russia deploying weapons in Mexico is a precursor to them invading? Or that the US would be worried about that? Obviously not. Neither was Cuba. But it gives an adversarial power a tremendous strategic edge, while you get less than nothing out of it since it reduces your 'power' in the relative strategic balance of countries.

    • wqaatwt 2 days ago

      > Russia did not want NATO parked in their Achille's heel of the Ukrainian flatlands

      Russia (i.e. Putin but also Russians in general) wanted to rebuild their empire from the beginning. Anything else is just an excuse.

      > interests between them and the West

      Of course this conflict has been mostly one sides till the 2014, with Obama and Merkel bending over backwards to appease Putin.

      Also the implication that Russia has some God given right over dominion of half of Eastern Europe is a bit appealing..

      > our will on Russia and establishing a hierarchy of dominance.

      That is a very Ruso-Imperialist mindset. A society pretty permanently stuck in the 1800s politically and psychologically… e.g. Germany, France, Britain were somehow able to step over their ambitions and are doing relatively fine (even without having millions of foreigners subjugate)

    • rebolek 3 days ago

      Thank you for repeating Russian propaganda. But the truth is that Ukraine is sovereign nation and has every right to decide their future and give a fuck about Russia feelings. Russia is the aggressor and blaming anything on NATO is laughable propaganda.

      • ku-man 3 days ago

        "... the truth is that Ukraine is sovereign nation and has every right to decide their future..."

        In all honesty, would you hold that argument if Mexico decides to host Russian or Chinese troops?

MonkeyClub 3 days ago

> Russia will conquer Ukraine

Perhaps the objective isn't to conquer the whole of the Ukraine, but only most of it, leaving the western parts independent.

This seems to be pushed as the right approach wrt the Ukraine in Alexander Dugin's Foundations of Geopolitics, which apparently is used as the source for Russia's current "Eurasianist" geopolitical doctrine:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundations_of_Geopolitics

_heimdall 3 days ago

Are you expecting Ukraine to ultimately buckle and collapse if the war of logistics continues for long enough?

It doesn't seem like Russia has the will, or potentially the capability, to actually conquer Ukraine rather than squat on some of their land and hope to move their border.

TheOtherHobbes 3 days ago

Russia is on the same spiral, but further ahead. They're going down together. The US has some chance of pulling out of the nose dive, but it's slim.

They may or may not take Europe and Ukraine with them.

China is better placed to survive, but has its own structural issues.

tonyedgecombe 3 days ago

>Russia will conquer Ukraine, any other prediction at this point is absurd.

They have been moving across Ukraine at a literal snails pace.

  • dmpk2k 3 days ago

    That is how attrition war works. Until it doesn’t.