Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by Channel72 »

Simon_Jester wrote:If we accept that nuclear arsenals are not going away, little is lost by saying "if you move an armored brigade across the Polish border, you get one warning before we start launching nuclear missiles at it." Because it's not like tank columns can invade a country on a noticeable scale by accident.

So... you're not making an argument against security guarantees and "nuclear tripwires." You're making an argument for general nuclear disarmament. Which is a respectable position; it's just a separate position.
Well, I'm not making an argument for general nuclear disarmament because I don't think it's realistic. It would be great, yeah - but it's unlikely to happen. Although, the US under Obama has made significant progress towards reducing the number of actual stockpiled nukes, which incentivizes Russia to do the same.

My argument is simply that widening the mutual-defense umbrella to include Poland and Estonia increases the potential set of things that could occur that might cause someone to whip out the launch codes. Putin would be more likely to invade non-nuclear Poland, or bordering Estonia, than say, um... France, because it's easier. But with NATO, Estonia is now another nuclear trigger point. Now, I understand that you're saying that this trigger point is precisely what we can count on to reliably deter Putin from ever daring to invade Estonia. My response is simply: that's not at all clear. I mean, I don't personally believe Putin would ever invade Estonia, but it's possible he, or his successor, might find a good enough reason to do so, betting that the West just wouldn't really give a shit for the most part. I mean, he's managed to frame the entire Ukraine invasion as something of a humanitarian intervention, so who knows? And my argument is simply that the cost of nuclear war on human civilization is so, so, so very extreme, that we really should try to avoid creating these potential situations in the first place.

But that argument is not something I put much weight on. To me, the more significant argument is that NATO is just obsolete, because it turns out that after WW2 the global economy has developed to such an extent that we no longer need things like NATO. More on that below.
Simon Jester wrote:Now, the problem is that the logical outcome of this is that nuclear powers exert tyranny over any nation that does not have nuclear weapons, resulting in a multipolar world of violent empires held together and secured from external interference by nuclear terror, with various nations frantically seeking nuclear weapons to preserve their own safety.
Except that just hasn't actually happened. Latin America is entirely non-nuclear, and yet the US doesn't exert too much tyranny over it, for the most part. So is Canada. Yes, we bully them sometimes and we invaded Panama, but those incidents are few and far between. And the UK and France aren't exerting tyranny over Germany, Spain or Poland, for that matter either. (Quite the contrary, Germany actually exerts more influence over all of them, despite not having nukes, because the German economy is fucking amazing, so it wields more influence over the Eurozone/EU)
Simon Jester wrote:This is pretty much the kind of thing that we're trying to avoid in, say, the Middle East- with Iran having nuclear weapons to make them unattackable by their Sunni neighbors and carving out a 'Greater Iran' from the Shi'ite areas to their west, while the Saudis seek the bomb so as to avoid being susceptible to nuclear blackmail, and while the Israelis double up on their nuclear arsenal and brandish it more and more threateningly and on a shorter hair trigger. Something like that.
Yes, but this is only a problem for developing countries with emerging economies. It is not so much a problem in the first world where the economies are highly developed and globally intertwined. Which is why I'm saying that the real, long-term solution to "end all wars", so to speak, is not to create fragile nuclear staring contests, but to develop the global economy to the extent that war becomes ultimately useless. Which is why I'm saying NATO is something of a relic - it may have once been useful, it may still even be useful for some things, but it doesn't represent a long-term solution to anything.

War used to be highly economically fruitful, whether in terms of looting conquered nations, or the industries it promotes. But hey... it's 2015 so let's see... Lockheed Martin and Boeing are worth about $60B and $100B respectively - they could both be bought out by Apple, Google or Facebook without Tim Cook so much as blinking. Even the Chinese tech company Baidu is worth more than Lockheed Martin. Plus, a lot of these defense companies do a lot more than just develop weapons, so it's not like war is their only source of revenue anyway.
Simon Jester wrote: People were saying (in essence) that this would work back before World War One too... Kipling poked at this idea in his 1903 poem The Peace of Dives.

By itself, it does not work very well, because (again) people are great at convincing themselves to act against their economic self-interest.

It works much better when war is 'impossible' for some other reason, so that economic ties have time and space to grow into bonds of mutual amity. And so that no one worries about a war in the near future, which makes it more profitable and sensible to keep those economic ties in place rather than guardedly watching and limiting them.

But for that to happen you need, well, some other source of security, of the conviction that "we will not be invaded." Nuclear weapons are actually pretty good for providing the assurance of "we will not be invaded" unless one believes the neighbors are insane... in which case you'd have the same fear of invasion whether you had the nuclear weapons or not.
And yet, a lot's changed since the early 20th century when Kipling wrote that. The economy is truly globalized on an unprecedented scale. Shareholders of major US companies actually care about the stability and success of the rest of the world, because it effects their returns.

We're in a transitory phase right now, where we have a global economy that encompasses much of the world, where US, European, Chinese, Japanese, Indian and Russian multi-national corporations are financially intertwined and traded across various stock exchanges. The more isolated a country is from this economic network, the more likely it is to revert to old world hostilities (e.g. North Korea.) The US and Russia are probably the most threatening, in terms of stirring up instability with military interventions - but these incidents are isolated, and both the US and Russia are heavily invested in the success of the global economy.

Now, currently, it happens to be that there are certain "hot spots" of instability in the developing world, such as the Middle East, where nuclear hostilities are a real concern. Other parts of the developing world, such as much of Central and South America, don't have these problems to the same extent because their economies comprise many different sectors and they depend heavily on established trade relations with each other as well as with the US and other first world economies.

Of course, certain Middle Eastern countries are also highly economically intertwined with the first world, it's just that there are many other specific, non-economic related details that can work to destablize a developing region. With the Mideast in particular, (and let's be honest, the Mideast is the biggest problem here) - various details such as the existence of Israel, and four decades of radical Saudi Madrassahs plus slipshod US interventions have worked to destabilize the region. Even so, I think the current instability in the Mideast might be way more economic in nature than we usually assume. The Gulf nations stumbled upon the unlikely combination of a highly-valued resource to export and an absurdly backwards culture, which has severely stagnated the development of their non-energy economic sectors, and generally retarded development throughout the region. You know Arabic is the 6th most spoken language on Earth, yet Arabic websites only account for about 0.001% of the Internet? You know why? Because they have no fucking real tech sector to speak of - they struck oil and then pretty much called it a day in terms of economic development. (That's a simplification but whatever.)

Regardless, we can talk about the individual details that lead to wars in this or that region, but for the most part NATO doesn't help with any of this, because the first world (and to a lesser extent the former "second world", i.e. Eastern Europe) is becoming more and more economically intertwined to the extent that any large-scale war is really unlikely. Putin's current antics are most likely a distraction - his invasion of Ukraine is extremely alarming, but I don't think it represents any kind of reversal of the trend I'm talking about here. The Russian search engine Yandex went IPO a few years ago to an $11B market cap, and includes stockholders from all over the world, including US CEOs and congressmen, and of course the energy giant Gazprom is traded all over the world. The US and Russia aren't exchanging nukes any time this century, at least if Wall Street has anything to say about it. (Hint: it does.) And really, Putin is for the most part a (corrupt) businessman, even if he might have certain ambitions of expanding Russia's borders.

So NATO (or MAD) is not a long-term solution here. The long-term solution is continuing to develop third-world economies, and continuing to promote international economic entanglement. I think more than the EU, more than any political arrangement, this is the major reason for peace in the first world since the end of WW2.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by K. A. Pital »

Latin America is entirely non-nuclear, and yet the US doesn't exert too much tyranny over it, for the most part.
Surely you must be joking. Since the US got nukes, and even before, it basically ruled the place with an iron fist until very recent times.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

K. A. Pital wrote:
Latin America is entirely non-nuclear, and yet the US doesn't exert too much tyranny over it, for the most part.
Surely you must be joking. Since the US got nukes, and even before, it basically ruled the place with an iron fist until very recent times.
Yeah.. coups (Pinochet, Venezuela) , invasions (Bay of Pigs, Nicaragau etc.), death squads... it's like people have selective memories or something.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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TimothyC wrote:http://www.pewglobal.org/2015/06/10/1-n ... n-ukraine/

While some in NATO are reluctant to help aid others attacked by Russia, a median of 68% of the NATO member countries surveyed believe that the U.S. would use military force to defend an ally. The Canadians (72%), Spanish (70%), Germans (68%) and Italians (68%) are the most confident that the U.S. would send military aid. In many countries, young Europeans express the strongest faith in the U.S. to help defend allied countries. The Poles, citizens of the most front-line nation in the survey, have their doubts: 49% think Washington would fulfill its Article 5 obligation, 31% don’t think it would and 20% aren’t sure.
Yeah.

At best 16% of the German population thinks that they shouldn't have to abide by the Article 5 text while being sure that the US will.

Might help if Germany at least tried to meet their treaty obligations. Reoccupying might also work.
What exactly is your point? That Germany should remilitarize and go adventuring like it did until May 1945? That it should be like the UK and supply a brigade of under-equipped infantry every time Uncle Sam tells them to (no matter how many times the USAF strafes them)?

The stated purpose of NATO, according to Churchill, Ismay, Kennan, Acheson, et al is to "keep America in, Russia out and Germany down". Seems to be doing just fine.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Well surely the part about Germany is a product of the times and no longer applicable?

And how about instead of your two absurd extremes (Germany turns Nazi again or is a weak puppet of the US), Germany has a strong enough force to, at minimum, both abide by its treaties (unless it withdraws from said treaties) and to protect its own territory? You know, the basic obligations of a government to provide security for its citizens and keep its promises?
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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The Romulan Republic wrote:Well surely the part about Germany is a product of the times and no longer applicable?

And how about instead of your two absurd extremes (Germany turns Nazi again or is a weak puppet of the US), Germany has a strong enough force to, at minimum, both abide by its treaties (unless it withdraws from said treaties) and to protect its own territory? You know, the basic obligations of a government to provide security for its citizens and keep its promises?
German territory in under threat? From whom?
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by The Romulan Republic »

Two plausible threats: Russia if Putin keeps expanding and starts a war with NATO, and terrorists (either domestic or foreign and either Islamic or Right wing/Neo-Nazi). Admittedly, the former threat is not one Germany can do a great deal about on its own, I suppose, short of pouring huge amounts of money into missile defence or its own nuclear arsenal (and I don't know if they can afford that). And the latter is something I hope can be dealt with purely through law enforcement, but you never know.

Regardless, it would be foolish to neglect ones' military just because you're not currently threatened. Things can change and a government should not be reliant on others to defend its country.

But frankly, I expect any Germany members of this forum are more qualified than I to say what kind of military Germany needs. I'd be interested to here their thoughts on the matter.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by Gandalf »

When you state that terrorists can threaten territory, what exactly do you mean? The way you've written it can be taken multiple ways.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by Channel72 »

K. A. Pital wrote:
Latin America is entirely non-nuclear, and yet the US doesn't exert too much tyranny over it, for the most part.
Surely you must be joking. Since the US got nukes, and even before, it basically ruled the place with an iron fist until very recent times.
That's... not the point. My statement has to be considered in the context of my response to Simon.

Firstly, the US's ability to bully Latin America is orthogonal to having nuclear weapons. We can be a very effective bully without having nukes. Secondly, I'm pretty much talking about recent times, i.e. within the last 20 years or so, not Cold War Bay of Pigs stuff. And fine, even within the last 20 years I realize the US has interfered in Latin American politics by supporting this or that coup, but really that's hardly "tyrannizing them with nukes". For a stronger example of what I'm talking about, see my comment about Germany vs. the Eurozone, where Germany exerts enormous influence despite not having nukes.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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Gandalf wrote:When you state that terrorists can threaten territory, what exactly do you mean? The way you've written it can be taken multiple ways.
It is very unlikely that a terrorist group could actually take over much or any of Germany in the near future, baring some hypothetical catastrophe that severely alters the status quo. However, they can certainly commit acts of violence against its citizens on its territory just as has occurred in many other countries. Does that clarify my meaning?
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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Russia does not welcome any US equipment in the Baltics.
Russia Threatens Retaliation If US Puts Heavy Weaponry in Eastern Europe

By Sally Hayden
June 15, 2015 | 7:55 pm

Reported US plans to store heavy weaponry in eastern Europe would be the most aggressive Western act since the Cold War, a Russian defense ministry official said Monday.

Warehouses dotted across Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, and several other eastern European countries, are expected to be stocked up with heavy army equipment, according to a report in the New York Times over the weekend.

No final decision has yet been taken by the US, but one government official told Reuters that the Pentagon is planning to store battle tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, and heavy weapons for as many as 5,000 troops. A company's worth of equipment, enough for 150 soldiers, would be kept in each of the three Baltic nations, while enough equipment for a company or possibly a battalion, or about 750 soldiers, would also be located in Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, and possibly Hungary.

Russia was quick to react to the news. "If heavy US military equipment, including tanks, artillery batteries and other equipment really does turn up in countries in eastern Europe and the Baltics, that will be the most aggressive step by the Pentagon and NATO since the Cold War," Russian defense ministry official General Yuri Yakubov was quoted by Interfax news agency as saying. "Russia will have no option but to build up its forces and resources on the Western strategic front."

"Our hands are completely free to organize retaliatory steps to strengthen our Western frontiers," Yakubov added, specifically mentioning the possibility of beefing up Russian forces in Belarus, and hurrying the deployment of Iskander missiles to Kaliningrad.

Related: Spooked by Russia, Lithuania Is Reintroducing Military Conscription

Polish Defense Minister Tomasz Siemoniak tweeted on Sunday that he and US Defense Secretary Ash Carter had been holding talks and negotiations about placing US heavy army equipment in Poland last month.

"Decisions are near," he wrote.

A former Moscow satellite, Poland believes that its security is threatened by Russia's hostile actions in neighboring Ukraine and is seeking permanent US and NATO presence on its territory and in the region as a deterrent.

Siemoniak also told the PAP news agency that if this equipment was placed in Poland, it will remain "for years and for decades."

"It is not a temporary reaction to crisis," he said.

NATO is holding military sea, land and air exercises in Poland, the Baltic states and Romania this month, in response to calls from these members for greater security reassurance.

Among the thousands of NATO troops is the "Spearhead Force," a new rapid reaction force agreed on at a NATO summit last year, and designed to deploy within 48 hours after an order is received. Last Tuesday the alliance launched the final part of NOBLE JUMP, a 10-day military exercise mostly in Poland that is meant to test the new force.

In May, VICE News followed the Lithuanian army during Operation Lightning Strike — a four-day wargames exercise. The drill marked the first nation-wide test of Lithuania's new 2,500-strong "Rapid Reaction Force," set up in the wake of the Ukraine crisis to deal with hybrid warfare threats, such as armed protests, and airfield and weapons stockpile

In the bordering Baltic states, rhetoric has grown steadily more anxious as the estimation of the menace Russia poses escalates. "The threats to the Baltic region have increased. This has been discussed many times and I view positively (the fact) that talks lead to concrete decisions which, I think, will become a reality," Lithuanian Prime Minister Algirdas Butkevicius told Reuters.

Lithuania reintroduced military conscription earlier this year, and in March President Dalia Grybauskaite told the BBC that she felt the country was "already under attack."
https://news.vice.com/article/russia-th ... ern-europe
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by LaCroix »

The Romulan Republic wrote:
Gandalf wrote:When you state that terrorists can threaten territory, what exactly do you mean? The way you've written it can be taken multiple ways.
It is very unlikely that a terrorist group could actually take over much or any of Germany in the near future, baring some hypothetical catastrophe that severely alters the status quo. However, they can certainly commit acts of violence against its citizens on its territory just as has occurred in many other countries. Does that clarify my meaning?
And why should the military be involved in a thing that falls into police jurisdiction? What benefit would a Leopard tank or a Eurofighter bring in regards to investigating a suspected or active terror cell?
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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And why should the military be involved in a thing that falls into police jurisdiction?
Bomb squads are usually military units?
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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Darth Tanner wrote:
And why should the military be involved in a thing that falls into police jurisdiction?
Bomb squads are usually military units?
Germany has civilian bomb squads (Kampfmittelräumdienst). They are used frequently to dispose of old WW2 bombs that get dug up all the time (about 5000 per year) during construction. Depending on the state they are either police, fire department or other civilian institutions.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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The Romulan Republic wrote:
Gandalf wrote:When you state that terrorists can threaten territory, what exactly do you mean? The way you've written it can be taken multiple ways.
It is very unlikely that a terrorist group could actually take over much or any of Germany in the near future, baring some hypothetical catastrophe that severely alters the status quo. However, they can certainly commit acts of violence against its citizens on its territory just as has occurred in many other countries. Does that clarify my meaning?
These acts of violence are tragic but not threatening to countries existance. Most European countries have lived with terroist threats for decades (IRA, RAF, ETA and so on) and they are not really a significant factor in the daily life of most people. Even an attack as large 9/11 isn´t anything resembling a meaningful existential threat to a nation. Traffic and cancer is a much larger threat than a couple of silly terrorists.

I think that comparing terrorists to an invasion by a powerful country doesn´t make sense. But then I think a big war with Russia is absurdly unlikely as well.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by The Romulan Republic »

LaCroix wrote:
The Romulan Republic wrote:
Gandalf wrote:When you state that terrorists can threaten territory, what exactly do you mean? The way you've written it can be taken multiple ways.
It is very unlikely that a terrorist group could actually take over much or any of Germany in the near future, baring some hypothetical catastrophe that severely alters the status quo. However, they can certainly commit acts of violence against its citizens on its territory just as has occurred in many other countries. Does that clarify my meaning?
And why should the military be involved in a thing that falls into police jurisdiction? What benefit would a Leopard tank or a Eurofighter bring in regards to investigating a suspected or active terror cell?
The military should not deal with law enforcement, and terrorism, unless its on a very big scale, should be something that the police can handle.

I acknowledge that Germany is not currently facing any attack that requires military power. But that does not mean that their are not things that could conceivably become a more serious threat in the future. I raised two possible sources of attacks on Germany. Likely? I hope not. But one should not base their military planning on the best case scenario.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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Giving up military capability today because you face no realistic military threat could be regretted when you do face a military threat tomorrow. Especially if NATO dissolves due to self interest and people wanting to save money and Russia can start looking at European states on their own with no military backup.

Salami tactics mean there would never be one big Russia tank charge all the way into France for people to immediately react to but within a few years they could have most of eastern Ukraine, a few decades after that the rest of Ukraine, a few decades after Eastern Poland and so forth. At what point do you decide it was a mistake to downsize your military forces and abandon military alliances and then regret selling your tanks to a private storage company like Germany is doing now.

Now obviously Russia is hardly in a economic position to be taking on NATO, shes struggling enough with Ukraine, thanks to the oil price its burning through its foreign reserve like there's no tomorrow but that's not going to last and prior to that it was in a military modernisation phase.

What more concerned me about the survey was that EU members would not want to move to protect a fellow EU member let alone a fellow NATO member. If the EU would not respond to an invasion that's hardly reassuring for being reliable future superstate.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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That's not likely to happen and you know it. At best the Russians might take the Ukraine and the Baltic states. They simply do not have the power or incentive to go further. Seriously, what does Russia have to gain from conquering say France?
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

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Well France for one!

I'm not saying its even remotely possible for Russia to invade France, for one France has its own nuclear deterrent and for two there are a lot of other countries in the way. But how could I say that is definitely not going to be the case in 50 years time or 100?

Russia is a big unified country with an authoritarian leadership that has a track record of invading its neighbours. Today its Crimea, in 2030 its Kiev, in 2060 its Warsaw. You can't tell what the future will bring so abandoning military capabilities is naive at best.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by Purple »

Darth Tanner wrote:Well France for one!

I'm not saying its even remotely possible for Russia to invade France, for one France has its own nuclear deterrent and for two there are a lot of other countries in the way. But how could I say that is definitely not going to be the case in 50 years time or 100?
And again. Just imagine that France does not have atomic weapons. Or that say Germany is hostile toward OTAN or what ever. What does Russia ever have to gain from conquering them? What realistic political, economic or other gain is there to be had?
It has become clear to me in the previous days that any attempts at reconciliation and explanation with the community here has failed. I have tried my best. I really have. I pored my heart out trying. But it was all for nothing.

You win. There, I have said it.

Now there is only one thing left to do. Let us see if I can sum up the strength needed to end things once and for all.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by K. A. Pital »

It is simply ridiculous that a nuclear power may be "conquered" by another nuclear power. Nukes do not work that way. They are designed exactly for such a scenario and no one needs a ravaged wasteland.

Russia is not alone in its attempts to recreate a lost sphere of influence (France did it in Algeria earlier). It did not lead everyone to weird phobias.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by Purple »

The point that you all are so willfully ignoring is that I hold the claim that Russia has absolutely nothing to gain from trying to expand westward beyond the Ukraine and maybe bits of Poland. It does not matter if the countries there have atomic weapons, powerful allies, armies or what ever or not. Barring some Russian super-hitler in the future who goes crazy for living space there is simply no reason to ever expect such a war again.
It has become clear to me in the previous days that any attempts at reconciliation and explanation with the community here has failed. I have tried my best. I really have. I pored my heart out trying. But it was all for nothing.

You win. There, I have said it.

Now there is only one thing left to do. Let us see if I can sum up the strength needed to end things once and for all.
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by K. A. Pital »

Purple wrote:The point that you all are so willfully ignoring is that I hold the claim that Russia has absolutely nothing to gain from trying to expand westward beyond the Ukraine and maybe bits of Poland. It does not matter if the countries there have atomic weapons, powerful allies, armies or what ever or not. Barring some Russian super-hitler in the future who goes crazy for living space there is simply no reason to ever expect such a war again.
I understand your claim. It is logical, and mostly correct. The point is, however, that the Russian/EU border is a contested border, a border between one sphere of influence and the other. Eastern Europe belonged to the Russian sphere of influence, so attempts to recreate it are bound to create conflict situations. Should larger nations go to war over some other nations that are on the periphery of their sphere of influence, that is the question. Russian attack on France is about as likely as a NATO attack against the Russian heartland. :lol:
Lì ci sono chiese, macerie, moschee e questure, lì frontiere, prezzi inaccessibile e freddure
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Qui incontri, lotte, passi sincronizzati, colori, capannelli non autorizzati,
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Purple
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by Purple »

K. A. Pital wrote:
Purple wrote:The point that you all are so willfully ignoring is that I hold the claim that Russia has absolutely nothing to gain from trying to expand westward beyond the Ukraine and maybe bits of Poland. It does not matter if the countries there have atomic weapons, powerful allies, armies or what ever or not. Barring some Russian super-hitler in the future who goes crazy for living space there is simply no reason to ever expect such a war again.
I understand your claim. It is logical, and mostly correct. The point is, however, that the Russian/EU border is a contested border, a border between one sphere of influence and the other. Eastern Europe belonged to the Russian sphere of influence, so attempts to recreate it are bound to create conflict situations. Should larger nations go to war over some other nations that are on the periphery of their sphere of influence, that is the question. Russian attack on France is about as likely as a NATO attack against the Russian heartland. :lol:
Exactly. There is no need to go to war over these things. Just as long as we all agree to split the spheres up and decide which border country goes to whom we should have no more wars.
It has become clear to me in the previous days that any attempts at reconciliation and explanation with the community here has failed. I have tried my best. I really have. I pored my heart out trying. But it was all for nothing.

You win. There, I have said it.

Now there is only one thing left to do. Let us see if I can sum up the strength needed to end things once and for all.
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K. A. Pital
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Re: Germans don't get the idea of mutal defense

Post by K. A. Pital »

Actually, no. We will keep having conflicts on the border of these spheres as long as they exist.
Lì ci sono chiese, macerie, moschee e questure, lì frontiere, prezzi inaccessibile e freddure
Lì paludi, minacce, cecchini coi fucili, documenti, file notturne e clandestini
Qui incontri, lotte, passi sincronizzati, colori, capannelli non autorizzati,
Uccelli migratori, reti, informazioni, piazze di Tutti i like pazze di passioni...

...La tranquillità è importante ma la libertà è tutto!
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