Anonymous wrote:Despite massive western aid, Ukraine has failed to recapture significant territory this summer. It’s a stalemate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
We've supported worse in proxy wars. As long as they're killing Russians, there is no reason not to arm them
This all damn day.
Us policy makers are concerned that the eu could fracture over this.
Let’s revisit in feb 2023.
EU has itself to blame, for continuing its dependence on Russian gas. Putin is like a mobster running a protection racket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
We've supported worse in proxy wars. As long as they're killing Russians, there is no reason not to arm them
This all damn day.
Us policy makers are concerned that the eu could fracture over this.
Let’s revisit in feb 2023.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
We've supported worse in proxy wars. As long as they're killing Russians, there is no reason not to arm them
This all damn day.
Us policy makers are concerned that the eu could fracture over this.
Let’s revisit in feb 2023.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
Totally ignoring the fact that Zelenskyy ran as a political outsider on an anti-corruption platform sticking his thumb in the eye of the power elite, and was making many changes to fix these problems before Ukraine was attacked by Russia. And I believe part of why Russia attacked was because they saw their remaining influence with the power elite waning due to those changes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
We've supported worse in proxy wars. As long as they're killing Russians, there is no reason not to arm them
This all damn day.
Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
Anonymous wrote:“ There is deep mistrust between the White House and Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky — considerably more than has been reported.”
- nyt , Tom Friedman
Ukrani-philes, defend yer man.
TF has a direct line to the oval, so this was def authorized.
My guess - Whitehouse knows how bad the winter is gonna get for Europe and is sooner rather than later going to try to lean on VZ to get a ceasefire with Russia.
Whitehouse fears that europe won’t last in unity through the winter and populist fervor will reach a fever pitch as Russia throttles LNG
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
We've supported worse in proxy wars. As long as they're killing Russians, there is no reason not to arm them
Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.
Anonymous wrote:Can't stand Friedman, but good. Seeing the excuses made for and the willful inability to call dysfunction for what it is as it relates to Ukraine's power elite has been tiresome. They're renowned for venality to the point that I consider it to be an aspect of their national character. Russia is in heel with them on that aspect of their political life... but LOL at any idea that Ukraine doesn't have massive internal structural problems. Hauling in NGO's to shoehorn "democracy" into their public life isn't going to fix these corrupt impulses and attitudes, either.