Actually, according to the link, James Baker, the US secretary of state, to whom the comment was made, replied, "We agree with that."
But Baker wasn't the final decision maker, and by the time that came around it was no longer in the agreement, was it.
So back to Jeremy's comment, "This is one part of the former Soviet Union invading another part. I don't know how you can connect this with negotiations between the USSR and NATO in 1990. Was Gorbachev threatening that the USSR would invade the USSR if NATO expanded? Because that is what has happened." We don't know what Gorbachev had in mind about what would happen if there was a broadening of the NATO zone. We just have his clear statement that it would be unacceptable, and agreement from Baker.
And an agreement signed by both sides which didn't reflect that. And a situation where the USSR no longer exists anyway, and has been replaced by a range of independent nations who have their own rights and treaties. Nobody's asking what the Ottoman Empire's take is on this, either...
My point to you is that when you say, "Gorbachev could dislike the expansion, Putin can dislike the expansion, who gives a shit", it's a bit like a kid testing his parents. And I bet all the Ukrainian soldiers forced to die as a result of NATO saying that, do give one.
And Putin saying 'no, we won't invade anyone else' and then invading again, or saying 'give us the nukes and we guarantee your borders are safe from us' and then invading, or saying 'no, we've already invaded you once, we won't do it again' and then invading again is what, playing fucking tag? Putin does not get to dictate foreign policy to other nations, or we all end up in the corrupt, authoritarian shithole that is Russia.
Putin said the Minsk agreements no longer existed (22 Feb 2022) having recognized those entities' independence the day before; he claimed that as a UN member, Russia could now form a collective defense treaty with LPR and DPR.
Oh, that's OK then, Putin said he's no longer abiding by that treaty that he signed, and you're fine with that. But you're also suggesting that we should all be bound by something that wasn't in a treaty that a different entity signed long before which has been superseded? Are you choking on that hypocrisy, or wallowing in it?
It does look as though fomenting autonomy claims has been Russia's strategy to prevent any more ex-Soviet states from joining NATO?
Ya think?
Ukraine joining international military alliances was not in the agreement, so Russia did not sign up to it.
They don't need to, it's not about them. Just like NATO doesn't get to veto an arms agreement between Russia and North Korea, for instance.
Russia has no intention of using nuclear weapons against Ukraine - it wouldn't need to.
Did anyone (apart from maybe Medvedev?) suggest they would?
What happened was that in 2014 Ukrainians used force against its president, who had a policy of military neutrality (non-NATO membership) for Ukraine; this initiated the civil war and raised the potential for Ukraine to be under the NATO nuclear umbrella, which along with the threat posed by Ukrainian nationalists could ultimately lead to nuclear conflict.
You've missed the bit where the Ukrainian president of the time was elected on a platform of increased alignment with the West, particular the EU and NATO, and then when he got to power on that promise he gradually changed his tune, slid back on democratic freedoms, imprisoned the opposition, professed neutrality and started sucking up to Russia. Then the populace rose up in protest. Why he did that we don't know for sure, although the Ukrainian courts convicted in absentia for treason and now is harboured by Russia. So not wrong, but not really giving the proper context.
That is wrong. Russia does not send POWs to die in gulags.
No, it executes them in the field. Or tortures them. Or just denies them adequate food and water. At least according to the UN -
SourceAnd if Ukraine had just rolled over and let them in, where do you think the objectors would have ended up? On the beach at Sochi next to the Olympic park and the F1 circuit?
Which is I suppose, fair play if Russia is assisting DPR/LPR.
I think it was already fair play given Russia is still occupying Crimea, if I'm honest, but yeah let's misrepresent the occupation of Donetsk and Luhansk as 'assisting'. By the way, there is no 'DPR' or 'LPR' - they aren't independent states, no matter what Putin likes to tell people, they're Ukrainian Oblasts.
But by arming Ukraine they are indirectly responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths of the people they are claiming to help.
You are suggesting that if they weren't being supplied by the West they'd just give up? They'd still die, but they wouldn't be able to put up a fight doing it. We aren't forcing them to fight, they're wanting to do that already, we're just giving them the means to resist the hostilities directed towards them. If Putin wasn't invading not only would they not be dying, but the Russian troops that have been dying in far greater numbers also wouldn't be dying - are you going to blame that on us, as well, and just let Putin off the hook? What happens when Putin decides after Ukraine surrenders bloodlessly that Romania or Poland look good? Should we not activate Article 5 of the NATO treaty in case someone dies?
If you call it an invasion, it isn't justified; however, a Special Military Operation is about eliminating the threat from the violent nationalist wing, as described above; there was no intention to harm civilians or even occupy; that happened as a result of Boris Johnson pushing Ukraine to reject Russia's terms for peace.
You can call it the fucking International Cunt-Scout Jamboree if you'd like, it doesn't stop it being an invasion. You send troops, tanks, guns and mines into someone else's country, it's an invasion no matter what colour you paint it, how you pitch it on the news, how you choose to engrave the names of your victims on their headstones.
wiktionary - Noun
invasion (countable and uncountable, plural invasions)
A military action consisting of armed forces of one geopolitical entity entering territory controlled by another such entity, generally with the objective of conquering territory or altering the established government.
Merriam-Webster - invasion
noun
in·va·sion in-ˈvā-zhən
Synonyms of invasion
1
: an act of invading
especially : incursion of an army for conquest or plunder
Cambridge online dictionary - invasion
noun [ C or U ]
UK /ɪnˈveɪ.ʒən/ US /ɪnˈveɪ.ʒən/
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B2
an occasion when an army or country uses force to enter and take control of another country:
What do you know, it's an invasion. "If you want to call it..." Really? Is this what you're reduced to?
O.