The West were selling a life style promise it knew it couldn't deliver because its financial instituitions and corporates were bleeding the country dry along with their Russian accomplices.Dunners wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 12:11 pm Let me just open this can of multi-quote:
Or; "At the time former Warsaw Pact countries were freely choosing to join NATO..."Max B Gold wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 10:57 am At the time NATO was expanding and bringing former Warsaw Pact countries under its influence...
You could see it like that but it's a bit one sided. Like you say below the West would have being dangling big economic carrots in front of these countries with the quid pro quo being to sign up to NATO.
Russia was an unstable nuclear-armed state right on their borders. It had a history of aggressive expansion and Eastern Europeans would have been stupid to not foresee a time when a threat would re-emerge. It turns out that they were not stupid after all, and seeking collective security was an entirely sensible policy.
Except Ukraine, that is. Ukraine trusted Russia to respect its borders in exchange for giving up its nuclear weapons. That's a lesson learned, and in particular by the other eastern Europeans.
I repeat it was not a credible military threat in the time period we are talking about. Yes it had nuclear capability but like most of its military materiel it was in a sorry state.
Ukraine also gave up its neutrality. Silly move. The behaviour of small states is conditioned by their larger more powerful neighbours. Ukraine somehow forgot that important rule. They are not "free" actors on the world stage.
I'm going to suggest that the sneaky evil West wasn't really the baddie in all this, however this is irrelevant because...Max B Gold wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 10:57 am Its military was starved of resources and cash because the state was being stripped of its assets by the West and kleptocrats...
This assumption that the West wasn't asset stripping Russia and the Ukraine is the weakest part of your argument. Dismissing the underlying economic argument in favour of a fantasy world where states are able to make free choices is fancifully utopian.
I must be imaging the 190,000 troops currently plundering into Ukraine then. It may not have been a viable threat within a very limited window of time, but that was never going to remain the case.Max B Gold wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 10:57 am ...and was unable to maintain a viable military threat.
Straw Man alert! I was talking about a place in time when opportunities existed to demilitarise the earth not about a rebuilt Russian army with enhanced but still limited capability in comparison to the Western allies.
I think you're imagining a reality whereby Russia developing into a modern, open, liberal democracy was ever a realistic outcome. Perhaps most of us did at the time. It would have been great, sure, but I think that greater experts than you or I, and others with more at stake, calculated that it was never going to happen.
Under Yeltsin there were moves toward democratising Russia (political parties,elections, parliament, free press etc) but Putin ended that to pursue his state building dictatorship.
I've already commented on this when I tore your Chomsky article to shreds. DelusionalMax B Gold wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 10:57 am The geopolitical move should have been to disband NATO,
Now who has the imperialist mind-set? How about we let the former Warsaw Pact countries decide for themselves?
See above. It would be nice if they were able to decide for themselves but in the real world they can only act within certain paramaters when it comes to military alliances against neighbours
Yeah. Just like that. Flippant - no reply required.Max B Gold wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 10:57 am promoted democracy and growth in the former USSR and stop the theiving of the states assets.
Good. We're making progress. I was already there you are the blinkered one being swayed by propaganda.Max B Gold wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 10:57 am I can understand why the Eastern European countries sought protection from Russia...
The West promoted the benefits of its way of life. But why not? Why is that always framed as a bad thing? There will always be competing views for how to organise and run a territory. Based on all the viable options being implemented in the world today, for all its faults, I'd still choose our way of life over just about any other.Max B Gold wrote: ↑Fri Mar 04, 2022 10:57 am but the historical context is of the West pushing home economic and military advantage just because they could.
We didn't put a gun to anyone's head and force them to join in. They asked to. They weighed up their options and decided that what we have is pretty damn good.
You don't always need a gun to force people to decide what to do.