Quote (thesnipa @ Feb 28 2023 10:55am)
I bring it up repeatedly in response to "well the west moved towards russia so that's why the war is happening" posts. that's why Putin says the war is happening, yet no one seems to talk about the unsaid reasons its happening. and no one seems to want to be critical of putin's claim that's the only reason its happening.
as he grins to himself because the handshake agreement and LITERAL NAZIS OMG NAZIS ARE BACK narratives dominate the topic.
no one talks about how Ukraine was falling from Russian influence even previous to the CIA coup and would have flipped western in a few years anyways based on trends. they just say "cia did a coup so its our fault". as if we marched in with 25,000 soldiers, rather than just providing minimal support for the already western friendly minority govt and voters. again, no nuance.
i'd love to talk nuance and specifics, sadly its stopped every time by lazy idiots. "well we did go east so that's that", "well the CIA did provide support so that's that", "well biden brokered an oil deal, so that's that". its almost like renewed cold war tensions in a proxy war inside a country with shifting demographics are complex, and cant be simplified to the 1 sentence justification Putin supplies. which is like, my whole point all along.
I've said before that its the kind of distinction that lost its relevance when the US decided to interfere. Its a what-if scenario. Yes, the US
could have tried to wait on an organic pro-western movement to surge in Ukraine, which would have necessitated Russia to act first and intervene more directly in Ukrainian politics to keep their sphere of influence. But we didn't. When it comes to the legitimacy of democracy and the aggressors who change the status quo by force- we're the ones who acted first, we're the proximate cause. And that's not to quibble over how much of a role the CIA played- clearly micromanaging the government and pulling all the strings after the fact- or to point out that the existence of Nazi death squads really should indeed be a red line that overshadows any moral, legal, political complexity beneath it. I think even stripping that away and getting to the meat of what caused the Ukraine war, it pegs right into the form of the US color revolution.
and I think the complexity you're talking about is inherent to
all US color revolutions and the threat that Russia and China have perceived from them. We were never talking about the CIA going in with 25,000 troops (editor's note- I mean, like, post bay of pigs), we were talking about deep ethnic/religious/political divisions that pre-exist our interventions, but that we can exploit to rile up a populace to overthrow their government. There are huge populations of dissidents in Iran, in Egypt, in Bolivia and Kazakhstan and China. The threat isn't a bunch of CIA goons in black trucks pulling up, its the organization and support that could reach the tipping point of revolution. Ukraine was one such society. That doesn't diminish American culpability for intervening or Russian culpability for invading, what it does is just describe the mechanics of the system, what it took for us to reach this point.
A larger part comes down to what sort of lens you want to use to analyze it. If its a moralizing lens, you need to look at who started it. You need to look at the value of democracy, its continuity and legitimacy and the right of people to their self-determination free from foreign masters. If its the lens of a geopolitical chessmatch, then who dealt the fart is irrelevant, all that matters is who has manuevered themselves to gain or lose from the Ukraine war, what effect its having on our international relations, oil markets, supply chains, whether NATO expansion is being pushed back.
This post was edited by Goomshill on Feb 28 2023 11:23am