I used to think berets were lame but I’ve officially had my mind changed

anti-thatcher-action joker-che che-smile

  • kristina [she/her]
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    519 months ago

    Burkina Faso’s Ibrahim Traore: “Today, our relationship with Russia is primarily strategic. With Russia, there are no restrictions on the equipment we want to purchase. Others impose restrictions on us. They support us in terms of training, logistics, tactical training, and everything else. They provide support in these aspects."

    • Infamousblt [any]
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      669 months ago

      The west just can’t understand that sanctions don’t work when countries can just go trade with someone else. This is yet another fantastic example. The US won’t sell us shit? Okay we’ll buy it from their enemies instead.

      I hope the US sanctions the entire world.

      • GalaxyBrain [they/them]
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        269 months ago

        It worked for a while when the hegemony was absolute or there was cold war ideology stuff for them to work with, but it turns out rigging the game only works as long as you’re the only game in town.

      • @tocopherol@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        269 months ago

        I wrote a well cited essay in an English 101 class about how sanctions don’t work and often have negative results, I got a great grade and it seemed clear based on the evidence, but these mofos just can’t help but sanction. It must be useful in some way to the people doing it but what could be a personal benefit?

        • CarmineCatboy2 [he/him]
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          9 months ago

          It must be useful in some way to the people doing it but what could be a personal benefit?

          Financial speculation likely plays a part. It might seem geopolitically insane that Europe traded cheap russian energy for expensive american/norwegian/russian but through third parties energy… but everyone who’s invested in American LNG is making a killing. And Europeans who own the privatized import businesses are also making a second killing too.

          That aside there just seems to be a culture of sanctions. The west is used to breaking weak nations by isolating them from western finance, capital and technology. By sheer inertia this keeps on going despite how a country like China can just keep on prospering, or how countries like Russia and India can more than make do as well. Or how all the new economic powers mean that countries like the ASS group just has options and people to talk to.

          Is western finance good at insurance? Probably. But it’s not like Mumbai, Shanghai or Singapore can’t do the same service.

          • jackmarxist [any]
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            209 months ago

            The world is so lucky that China focused on self sufficiency and innovation instead of just becoming a western owned sweat shop.

        • kristina [she/her]
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          9 months ago

          cutting off from a market suddenly is probably useful for insider trading, at least. just keep it under wraps and keep the info to yourself so you can get the juicy stocks

          like one of the biggest proponents of sanctioning iran is the cashew industry, too, and iran has a very large cashew industry, so it pushes a competitor out of the market. essentially protectionism with extra steps

      • Maoo [none/use name]
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        139 months ago

        Traditionally the West then targets you for destruction for becoming an ally of the enemy (i.e. trading with the only people that would trade with you).

        • GalaxyBrain [they/them]
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          109 months ago

          If you’re being sanctioned you’re already an enemy, allying with another enemy is gonna do what? Get you sanctioned?

          • Maoo [none/use name]
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            139 months ago

            That’s what the targets hope for.

            Historically, it means coups and fascist militias or bombing campaigns.

            • GalaxyBrain [they/them]
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              59 months ago

              I can’t think of one nation after being sanctioned then trading with another enemy nation and being bombed as a consequence of those actions. The coups and fascist militias happen regardless of who you trade with. If you can think of an historical example I’d like to hear it, in a non argumentative way. I’d like you to inform me. They have to have already been sanctioned and then their trading with a different enemy has direct violent consequence or its kinda just business as usual.

              • Maoo [none/use name]
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                119 months ago

                Guatemala, basically the first example of the US flexing its new status as the global seat of capital, used this as one of its traps: place embargos on it, including weapons, in response to Arbenz doing SocDem things. Then Arbenz traded with the Soviets as they were the only major country to offer. The US used this as a major pretext for its campaign of painting Guatemala as a potential forward base for the Soviets and getting taken over by the reds. This campaign was part of its larger coup effort that included the use of US-trained death squads, genocide of the Mayan communities, and finally a bombing campaign to seal the deal. Lumumba had a similar experience, etc etc.

                Obviously there are no countries that have no other interactions with the US prior to getting sanctioned. Every country is a potential target, friend or foe, and friends get turned into foes at the drop of a hat. A country gets sanctioned because it’s already a target, the US already has some stated pretext and a few schemes it’s implementing.

    • Xx_Aru_xX [she/her, they/them]
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      329 months ago

      The U.S: No Turkey we won’t allow you to get the F35 because you bought S400 from Russia >:(

      Russia: Yes United States of America? You want 31 Mi-17 helicopters? are you going to pay us? ok good they’re on their way.