I did email my MP a year ago. Her main argument for arming Ukraine was the illegal invasion and atrocities.
Encouraging Ukraine to Surrender further land to Russia will just encourage Putin, and other expansionist aggressors, to invade other places.
I replied that if we care about the Ukrainians, it would be better to stick to a policy of non-escalation because if they try to take back the land they lost, they will be slaughtered.
And if they don't they will have their cultural identity wiped out and be subject to the abject corruption of the authoritarian Russian regime. Ukraine has opted to fight rather than accept that alternative, and our government has decided that if that's what Ukraine thinks is best for them, we will support them.
I didn't hear back after that.
Probably because she quite rightly thought if that was the best point you could come up with there wasn't much point engaging with it.
We left Afghanistan because the US was withdrawing; I think the US law is definitely relevant.
Afghanistan was a different conflict, for different reasons, involving different groups. Very little of the justifications for that conflict apply to this one.
I started with the view that Russia was the perpetrator, but they would be too strong for Ukraine.
As, I think, did most people.
Ukraine seems to be trying to invoke NATO's assistance having failed to invoke Article 5 by pretending Russia attacked the Polish farm.
What? Ukraine hasn't attempted to invoke Article 5, as it is not a NATO member to be able to do so. Ukraine has reached out to allies around the world - many of whom are in NATO, but many also who aren't - for supplies and logistical support. I'm not sure where Polish farms fall into the equation.
There is plenty to read if you want evidence for terrorism and are willing to allow that Russia can tell truths sometimes.
Some Russians are telling the truth. My personal favourite was the Russian member of their UN Mission who resigned just after the invasion -
articleIt seems a logical inference to make.
Only if you accept the Russian official accounts at face value, and ignore not only the reports of neutral news agency reporting, but presume that the Ukrainian leadership has suddenly gone mad.
When I said "It sounds very much like the first sound and the hit are the same event." I meant that it sounds like the first sound was from the gun that fired the projectile, as opposed to the sound of an air defense missile being launched nearby to try and intercept an incoming missile.
I wouldn't be able to tell you what a Ukrainian or Russian mortar, howitzer or missile sounded like, and with the poor sound quality of the clip and the distortion produced by the baffle-effect of the built up area, I'd be sceptical if you could.
I accept that Russian missiles do hit civilians, but not as often as daily, and not deliberately, except in isolated instances.
If I'm feeling charitable I'd put that down to naivety. I can't guarantee that it's daily, but it's certainly not isolated incidents. And once it's no longer isolated incidents then it's at least negligence - which is unconscionable of itself if you're launching missiles towards civilian population centres as part of a wholly unjustifiable invasion - but it seems more like it's a deliberate tactic.
O.