MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Guest op-ed, The Guardian, 31 August, 2014
Nato must face up to the realities of Putin’s war of aggression in eastern Europe – and take material steps to support Ukraine
Comments
Warning Merkel on Russian ‘Invasion’ Intel
http://consortiumnews.com/2014/09/01/warning-merkel-on-russian-invasion-...
by A Guy Called LULU on Mon, 09/01/2014 - 5:08pm
So NATO is meeting this week, and the Times is now reporting that they will give serious consideration to the creation of a rapid-deployment force for the protection of the former Soviet bloc countries:
by Bruce Levine on Mon, 09/01/2014 - 11:25pm
I am sensing the approach of a business opportunity.
There must be two, maybe three generations of Americans who have no idea how to "duck and cover"--an essential technique, the mastery of which is vital to one's survival in the (apparently more likely today than it was yesterday) event of a nuclear attack.
Fortunately, I happen to have learned this maneuver as a boy, and it's like riding a bicycle....let's live long and PROSPER!
Edit to add: I look forward to approval of federal student loan funds to defray the tuition at Little Rogie's School for Survival....to enhance the experience, we'll buy oversized chairs and desks, so it will feel to the adults just like they are back in kindergarten.
by jollyroger on Tue, 09/02/2014 - 3:04am
by physgame.com (not verified) on Tue, 09/02/2014 - 10:54pm
by Lynell (not verified) on Tue, 09/02/2014 - 11:06pm
Prediction after reading the following: Putin will be backing down considerably not because of the Wesley Clark types, nor NATO and Obama, nor McCain types, but because his own citizens still have the fear-of-quagmire syndrome from Afghanistan and Chechnya. And these fears are now ramping up considerably. Selling this domestically is the main reason for all his silly tricks all along trying to make military ops look like civilian ops, and now he has to either figure out how to hide his use of troops even more or back down considerably:
by artappraiser on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 12:55pm
I predict a continuation of predominantly one-sided news. For example, I just heard on The Diane Rehm show that Russia has moved into Ukraine with hundreds of tanks, artillery pieces, etc. That stood unquestioned. Later, towards the end it became a thousand tanks. Maybe, but while I have no doubt that Russia is providing some aid to the separatists, I doubt the truth of those statements. I also suspect that that speaker knew that he was spouting BS. Fear mongering with lies and exaggeration is the first cousin of war mongering.
With all the reasons given to blame Putin, to fear him, to say how critical it is to wave a unified coalition of dicks at him, I heard nobody suggest that the West has any culpability at all in the crisis. There were no suggestions of possible beneficial actions by the U,S.that did not involve military force.
http://thedianerehmshow.org/audio-player?nid=19764
Other things not mentioned there and barely mentioned elsewhere:
by A Guy Called LULU on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 3:30pm
Mersheimer seems to think that Russia has the right to prevent the Ukraine from joining NATO or otherwise forging ties with the West. I would call that imperialism. Ukraine should be free to form alliances with whoever it wishes. Putin is treating Ukraine much as the United States treated Central America. That is indeed realpolitik, and realpolitik is immoral.
by Aaron Carine on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 5:49pm
I also don't know if Mersheimer is right in saying that the invasion of Crimea wasn't pre-meditated.
by Aaron Carine on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 5:51pm
I don't know either, it is hard to do anything better than make a best guess at the veracity of reports and opinions. But, I doubt that Russia's action regarding Crimea would have happened, at least in the near or foreseeable future, minus the eruption of the Ukraine situation and I seriously doubt that Putin either planned or anticipated that.
I would agree about Ukraine's right,in a more perfect world, to join NATO but in that world NATO would have no need to exist anyway. Regardless, the U.S,, has been willing to go to war in the past to keep Russian forces out of our near neighbors land, it came very close to happening, and would no doubt react the same way again. A logical goose would expect the same logic from a logical gander.
by A Guy Called LULU on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 7:11pm
Yeah, but I oppose those American wars too.
by Aaron Carine on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 7:25pm
Fai enough and you have been consistent in that position.
by A Guy Called LULU on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 7:34pm
Agree tha Diane Rehm has long ago joined the MSM in stoking every kind of scare and war fever out there. Its what media does these days. Regardless, I don't really think either the US or NATO is going to war in the Ukraine.
However Lulu, half of your argument on Putin contradicts your other half.
You say Putin is right to keep firm grasp on 'his influence' in Ukraine.
If so, it would make perfect sense for him to ensure his control by sending tanks in.
Then you claim you don't believe reports he is sending tanks in.
Lulu: Putin has the justification and motivation to invade, he has the troops and tanks to invade, but I don't believe reports that that is exactly what he is doing.
Does that make sense?
On the other hand, no member of the EU has ever asked to leave it to rejoin the 'old Soviet sphere'. It would not be surprising many in Ukraine would like to be Euro based also, instead of run by a corrupt Putin crony. And that they would fight and die confronting a Putin invasion, which seems to be what is happening.
by NCD on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 6:07pm
Actually, NCD, I did not comment one way or the other on the right or wrong of Putin's actions. I said what I believe to be his motives.
It may come to that but what I said is that I do not believe he has already sent them in by the hundreds or thousands. Maybe he has sent a few but that doesn't seem smart and Putin doesn't seem dumb.That column of white trucks was easy enough to photograph, why no pictures of the tanks? A column of one hundred tanks should be pretty easy to spot. I would bet he does have special forces in Ukraine like we do in Iraq and Syria and Afghanistan and Pakistan, and sixty or seventy other countries.
The justification would be, like I said before, the exact same as the U.S. would use.
Do you believe he is invading with masses of troops and hundreds or thousands of tanks?
I don't doubt for a moment that many in Ukraine would like to be in or closely aligned with the EU.
by A Guy Called LULU on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 7:32pm
The exact number of tanks, weapons or men Putin sends is doesn't matter, he will send enough numbers to accomplish what he wants, which I don't think anyone really knows at this point but Putin.
by NCD on Thu, 09/04/2014 - 8:39pm