Poland, 1939.
Poland in 1939 illustrates the danger of assuming that refusal preserves sovereignty when the balance of power is overwhelmingly unfavorable. Germany demanded concessions over Danzig and transit rights; Poland refused, relying on legal principle and security guarantees from Britain and France. Those guarantees did not translate into timely military relief. The result was not a better negotiating position but the destruction of the Polish state, occupation by Germany and the USSR, and the loss of millions of lives. Poland’s refusal was morally justified, but strategically catastrophic: once the invasion began, Poland had no leverage left and no meaningful capacity to shape the outcome.
Finland, 1939–40.
Finland’s experience in the Winter War shows the opposite logic. After initially resisting Soviet demands and fighting effectively, Helsinki concluded that prolonged war would end in occupation and loss of independence. Finland therefore accepted a deeply unfavorable peace, ceding territory but preserving its state, government, and army. The concessions were real and painful, but they prevented total defeat and allowed Finland to survive as a sovereign country outside the Soviet bloc. The lesson is not that concessions are fair, but that in asymmetric conflicts, negotiated loss can preserve long-term sovereignty where uncompromising resistance risks annihilation.
None of this denies the moral reality of Russian aggression or shifts responsibility away from the side doing the invading and shelling. The problem is that moral clarity does not translate automatically into favorable outcomes in the real world. International politics is full of cases where the morally right side was still destroyed because power, not justice, determined the result. Treating morality as a substitute for leverage risks confusing righteousness with capability. A strategy that assumes the world will enforce moral claims has repeatedly failed small states; acknowledging this is not cynicism, but recognition of how outcomes are actually produced when one side can escalate indefinitely and the other cannot.
Look at Gaza, Look at Venezuela - they dont deserve shit treatment but the world simply does not care to do anything about it.
None of this refutes my point that Russia's demands have not been in line with its battlefield position, unlike what you initially claimed.
Regarding the bigger picture point you're making: I think your examples are flawed and need a closer look: Poland occupied a central position in Europe, squeezed in between two aggressively expansionist behemoths led by genocidal madmen. Poland in 1939 was basically Piper Perri on the casting couch: getting pounded HARD was inevitable for them. No amount of appeasement towards Hitler or Stalin could have spared them from occupation or - once the German/Soviet war broke out - devastation. You're also conveniently leaving out the fact that other countries before the Poles had tried appeasement toward Nazi Germany and it didn't save them from occupation or concentration camps, either.
Now, one might argue that the death toll suffered by Poland was higher than that of, e.g., Czechoslovakia, but that would be another misleading point since Poland happened to be the epicenter of Jewish life in Europe based on migration patterns dating back centuries. Therefore, the Nazi occupation in Poland was always gonna be more repressive and lead to a higher volume of deportations to KZs.
Finland was a tiny, peripheral country without industry or natural resources, and didn't stand in between two major blocks. For them, signing a dictated peace with the USSR worked out because the USSR wasn't that interested in them and had bigger fish to fry. Also, while the Soviets had the Finns on the ropes in early 1940, the Finns had successfully inflicted heavy damage on them during the opening stages of the Winter War, which surely contributed to the Soviets settling for their minimum goal (establishing strategic depth to the north of Saint Petersburg) rather than keep pushing for maximalist demands (full occupation of Finland). And this peace deal didn't last long anyway since the Finns joined Operation Barbarossa just a year later.
All in all, the example of Finland during WW2 imho doesn't really prove that appeasement is a generally viable strategy for preserving peace and sovereignty. And when we're looking at the present situation, Ukraine is of course far more similar to the example of Poland than to the example of Finland.
This post was edited by Black XistenZ on Dec 29 2025 05:54pm