They didn't invade when Trump was president, though, they invaded under Biden.
Exactly, and a large reason is the glaring display of weakness on the international stage during the horribly botched Afghanistan withdrawal of the Biden admin. Like I've said: Russia responds to strength, not weakness - it has been like that for literally centuries.
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It's an existential issue for them now, if the regime loses, the regime dies. Trump's problem in this conflict is that he believes it can be solved peacefully, it can't. One side has to decide that the risks of waging war are greater than the costs. I don't think that will be Russia, because negotiating a peace on bad terms is regime suicide, and whereas in the US that might mean a nice retirement to Martha Vineyards, or your ranch in Wyoming, in Russia that means you get thrown from a building and die.
What you write here is correct, but the premise seems off. Say a peace deal enshrines the status quo, with Ukraine officially ceding these territories, the West officially recognising Crimea, most of the Donbas and the land bridge connecting the two as Russian territory, rump-Ukraine officially gives up any NATO ambitions, but remains a sovereign country and is free to join the EU - would that be such a bad outcome for Putin that it threatens his regime? I don't think so.
It would be extremely easy to spin such an outcome as a huge triumph of a defiant Russia which, under the glorious leadership of president Putin, has stood up to NATO encroachment, corrected a historic mistake stemming from the dissolution of the USSR and protected the lives of their Russian-speaking brethren from the terror of the nazi regime next door.
The leader who is at greater risk of defenestration or a polonium drink is Zelensky, not Putin.
This post was edited by Black XistenZ on May 30 2025 07:45pm