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Reply to "What dies it take for Russia to stop this war?"
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[quote=Anonymous]OP. I've been on this thread a while now. This was all I could think of. It's said "a good compromise is when both parties are dissatisfied". Neither Russians nor Ukrainians will accept a deal that loses their dignity. Not all Russians are guilty and not all Ukrainians will accept that fact. This is a deal with the Devil. Offer Putin a personal deal for a timed, planned, deliberate transitional abdication of power over the course of one year. In that time, he permits a peaceful transition of power via elections monitored by OSCE. Russian oil profits (less cost) will be held in escrow to pay for damages to Ukraine, and a reasonable, but not excessive amount in compensation for all injuries sustained, not to exceed a period of 25 years. Ukraine will be on the committee that manages the funds and approves reimbursement. All Russian nuclear weapons must be put in military lockdown, guarded by the Russian military for no less than 5 years, validated by international observers. Maintenance and national threat surveillance measures would continue; however, no readiness exercises or deployment of weaponry would be permitted. This is for Russia's own safety, until the new Government can re-screen and ensure their nuclear weaponry is in safe hands. Russia will be asked to rejoin nuclear talks after it's clear the nuclear weaponry is secure. Anyone who supported the 'special military operation' is banned from running for office / elected positions. All Russians who protested the war, fled the country, must be granted absolute amnesty and repatriation / immediate release, if held in incarceration. Those incarcerated may apply for compensation via the oil profits mentioned above. Russian officers and soldiers who committed war crimes must be held responsible and appear in International Court. In exchange, Putin, his family, and 200 of his closest confidants / supporters are permitted to leave the country to an undisclosed location of their choice, with their wealth, under the agreement that they refrain from any further political actions, social media, press interviews for the next 25 years (most will be dead by then anyway). Also, all economic sanctions will be lifted 90d after the new Russian administration assumes power. Russia agrees that should there be an overthrow of the elected Government within 25 years, or Russia renigs on any of these provisions; then the sanctions / escalation process will be restarted. No, this deal does not serve justice, but it saves lives and avoids anarchy in Russia, which would serve no point and risk "accidental" nuclear use. Much in the way U.S. DoJ makes deals with criminals as informants, treat Putin the same. Would Putin bite? Russian leader "stumbled and fell to his back, after which he fell on his side and slid down a couple of steps". Putin allegedly fell down the stairs and accidentally defecated himself, according to insiders https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1704836/putin-defecated-himself-stairs-fall-cancer-health-update-russia-war He's at death's door. The wolves and buzzards are circling. His military is one step away from both civil war or nuclear war. It's his only hope of preserving his precious Russia intact without it falling into anarchy.[/quote]
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