Chicago has a large expatriate Ukranian population, dating back to the mid 19th century. Many tales about bandits on the road, Policeman demanding bribes, etc when they had gone to visit after Statehood. My family hales from the Ukraine as part of the "Pale of Settlement" where the Romanovs confined Jews. We discussed possibly journeying there to check out the ancestral homeland but we were discouraged by others who had made the trek before us and said it wasn't safe
Ukraine
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post...we get the absolute nonsense of Putin trying to claim that they are the same, and then wanting to bomb the hell out of them.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postbut of course dressed up as security of the Russian state
It doesn't make sense to argue that they felt threatened by Ukraine seeking to join Nato/the EU when they were the ones who had ruptured the cooperation with Nato.
NB This is Nato's view of the situation, but it seems to be factually correct. What changed? Putin's ambitions? If Russia had had close political/military/economic relations with neighbouring Ukraine, why would it have mattered whether Ukraine (or Crimea/Donbas) were actually part of Russia? Is it just that I don't understand the Russian psyche?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI agree with the sentiment, and I hope that the seemingly “immediate” problems, the rise of Truss and the death of the Queen don’t push this to the bottom of the agenda list. I would place this near the top, along with climate change, but I fear the politicians are going to totally screw these things up.
There may also be some prudent reasons for not commenting too rapidly on recent events.
By the time news of events on the battlefield has appeared in the 'mainstream media' it is well out of date. There are sometimes issues with the more immediate online reports, hence Ukraine's request for discretion.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWhat I don't understand is why Russia acted in such a way that after the Nato-Russia Partnership for Peace (1994) and its developments, the successive actions of Russia, starting in 2008 with its intervention in Georgia, set Russia against the west in the first place. If Russia saw rapprochement with Nato and the west as guaranteeing its own security, why did it then jeopardise the relationship with unnecessary interference in Georgia and then Ukraine?
It doesn't make sense to argue that they felt threatened by Ukraine seeking to join Nato/the EU when they were the ones who had ruptured the cooperation with Nato.
NB This is Nato's view of the situation, but it seems to be factually correct. What changed? Putin's ambitions? If Russia had had close political/military/economic relations with neighbouring Ukraine, why would it have mattered whether Ukraine (or Crimea/Donbas) were actually part of Russia? Is it just that I don't understand the Russian psyche?
This became possible for many reasons, including the failure of the West to support Russian attempts at democracy in the post-Gorbachev era and the effects of trying to introduce full-on capitalism in a society unready for it. No doubt Putin also looked at the West's failure to take adequate steps over Georgia from 2008, exacerbated by general and widespread initial acquiescence in the annexation of the Crimea.
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Originally posted by Historian View PostIn my view (very simplified and probably simplistic), Putin has two main reasons for his decision to attack Ukraine. Firstly, he cannot afford a successful emerging democracy developing right next to Russia as an all-too-present counterpoint to what is happening just east.
Originally posted by Historian View PostSecondly, it fits as part of his constant declarations that Russia is under threat and therefore Russians must stick together and accept the need for 'strong government'.
Originally posted by Historian View PostNo doubt Putin also looked at the West's failure to take adequate steps over Georgia from 2008, exacerbated by general and widespread initial acquiescence in the annexation of the Crimea.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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....I was thinking about rfg's view reference BBC coverage of Ukraine....BBC must have spent a huge amount of it's budget (Emergency budget maybe?) up to about June when the war stopped being page-turner and went a bit grey and vague in news terms....BBC didn't appear to piggyback on other networks and was lavish - brought in lots and lots of stringer crews, as well as sending reporters to Ukraine cities/border crossings + Poland etc (many reporters pulled from other domains) - fed BBC 24 and studio had large numbers of presenters/experts[military/technical/historiocal/economists]/charts/cgi etc etc...and of course ITV/C4/Sky etc....newspapers....phew (still less than Gary Linaker gets I expect)bong ching
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt's Work in Progress. In 2021, it scored 32/100 and ranked 122nd out of 180 (Russia 29/100 136th)
https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2021
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Originally posted by Historian View PostIn my view (very simplified and probably simplistic), Putin has two main reasons for his decision to attack Ukraine. Firstly, he cannot afford a successful emerging democracy developing right next to Russia as an all-too-present counterpoint to what is happening just east. Secondly, it fits as part of his constant declarations that Russia is under threat and therefore Russians must stick together and accept the need for 'strong government'.
This became possible for many reasons, including the failure of the West to support Russian attempts at democracy in the post-Gorbachev era and the effects of trying to introduce full-on capitalism in a society unready for it. No doubt Putin also looked at the West's failure to take adequate steps over Georgia from 2008, exacerbated by general and widespread initial acquiescence in the annexation of the Crimea.
Having friendly relations with Ukraine, Georgia, whatever is beside the point when these Countries are abominations with no right to exist in the first place. All of his bluster about NATO threatening Russia is just an elaborate justification for this Imperialism.
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Following on from post 1208 here’s how the corruption index measures are considered by one organisation - https://www.transparency.org/en/news...are-calculated
Note though that this specifically refers to what is called “public sector corruption”, so doesn’t deal with malpractice in other parts of a country’s economy.
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Many might view Putin as yet another tyrant in the same way as were the Tsars and then the Socialists – accepted by the Russian people because he represents ‘Russia’. But perhaps the difference in his particular form of tyranny is that - however absurdly - a substantial number of Russian people believed that the Tsars were 'Russia' and the same believed that the Socialists were 'Russia.' Yes, they were all evil thugs like Putin, but people overlooked this because of the aesthetic they represented. There was much good in both the Tsarists and the socialist systems – both granted a certain stability, and the socialists certainly raised living standards for very many. But Putin is just a gangster. He will have to escalate the war now - perhaps by bombing Kyiv and using the same tactics that subdued Chechnya. This won’t work: the Ukrainians are stronger and better armed than were the Chechens – but he will still do it. Could he use a small scale nuclear weapon as some have suggested? I doubt it – what good would it do to create a vast area of uninhabitable wilderness? And if he tries a general mobilisation he will find his people turning against him – who wants to fight and die to defend a Mafiosa? Putin – lashing out like Macbeth - is doomed.
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