• _pi@lemmy.ml
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    8 days ago

    I’m arguing that Russia cannot set a precedent that NATO can just shoot missiles into Russian territory. Surely it can’t be that hard for to understand why Russia has to respond to this.

    You are again changing your story to fit whatever your current line of argumentation is. You’ve been using Ukraine/US/NATO interchangeably and saying that’s not what I said whenever I’m actually attempting to clarify your argument.

    If Ukraine is NATO, then this makes no sense because Ukraine has been shooting ballistic missiles into Russia since the war became hot, Ukraine has no nukes, proliferating a nuke to Ukraine for an ATACMS ranged attack would be the dumbest shit ever.

    If the US is NATO, then this makes no sense because the US can simply nuke Russia.

    If NATO is NATO, this still makes no sense because by itself NATO doesn’t own nukes.

    The reality is that Russia has no choice, it cannot actually escalate in a sensible way that doesn’t leave itself open for global retaliation if Ukraine shoots ballistic missiles inside the country. The only realistic way to read their communique is if we lose and you don’t let us lose on our terms we’ll use nukes.

    Except that they weren’t even successful with Assad. Last I checked he’s still in charge and Syria has not collapsed. Given that they couldn’t even do it to a small and poor country there was no rational reason to believe it could ever work against Russia.

    The Syrian GDP is about a tenth of what it was. The Syrian civil war has sent Syria 45+ years into the past. Jordan and Syria have literally switched places economically, which one was a regional ally of the US again? Sure Assad is holding on by his teeth, but Syria is a ruined country, it’s economy prior to the civil war was literally 1/4 oil and 1/4 agriculture, both were wiped out entirely by the war. Syria also used to be a regional banking capital thanks to Assad neoliberalizing the economy, and all that capital fled during the war.

    The US has ruined and degraded Syria, neutralized its regional power, and turned it into a destabilized interzone. The only worse level that Syria can go to is Libya’s. That’s literally a win. That’s literally, if done to Russia, what the US would describe as a “good outcome” of the Russia-Ukraine war, Putin doesn’t have to abdicate, he can simply be drowned in problems that take decades if not centuries to resolve without external help.

    And before we do the BRICS is singing the internationale of post socialist countries bullshit, China isn’t going to loan money to a Russia that was defeated in that way, because it’s a high risk / low reward outcome for them.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
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      8 days ago

      I’m not changing any story. If you go back to the start of the discussion then you’ll see that it’s the same thing I keep trying to explain to you over and over throughout this thread. Meanwhile, you just keep making straw man arguments instead of engaging with what I’m saying.

      The realistic way to read this is that Russia could retaliate using nuclear weapons in Ukraine, and then the ball will be in NATO court where NATO has to decide if they want to escalate further towards a nuclear holocaust or back off. Both sides can play the escalation game.

      Of course, Russia could also escalate asymmetrically, for example they could provide weapons to Yemen, Syria, and Iran that could shoot down stuff like F35s and get past AD. The US is incredibly exposed globally, and there are plenty of pressure points that Russia can exploit. This is the main reason I don’t expect Russia to respond directly to strikes into its territory.

      The US has ruined and degraded Syria, neutralized its regional power, and turned it into a destabilized interzone.

      Yet, Syria is still a viable state and the US forces in the region are slowly being squeezed out. The point here was that the objective of getting a regime change in Syria failed. Again, if US couldn’t even take down Syria, there was no hope of this working in Russia.

      Meanwhile, you don’t seem to understand the importance of Russia to China. Russia provides a shield in the west that prevents China being surrounded by NATO, and it provides China with the natural resources China needs meaning that it cannot be blockaded. These two factors make it vital to China that Russia stays stable and friendly to China. Which means there was absolutely no scenario where China could allow Russia to be defeated.

      • _pi@lemmy.ml
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        8 days ago

        Yet, Syria is still a viable state

        Damascus literally doesn’t have on-demand electricity, it experiences blackouts daily. More than half the people of Syria are food insecure. 6+ million people have been displaced in the last decade. The fuck you mean viable state?

        This conversation is just silly dude.

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
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          8 days ago

          Are you claiming Syrian government is going to collapse in the foreseeable future, or you have some private definition of what a viable state is that you’d like to share with us here?

          • _pi@lemmy.ml
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            8 days ago

            Yeah a viable state is capable of defending its borders, growing its economy, and developing quality of life for its citizens. Syria is failing on all 3 counts. Just because Assad can order people around doesn’t make Syria a viable state.

            • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
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              8 days ago

              Last I checked Syria is in a much better situation today than it was when US started trying to destabilize it. The economic situation is improving, and US presence there is not long for this world. Meanwhile, Assad has more popular support than any western regime leaders. If we apply your metric to the US then it’s not a viable state either.

              • _pi@lemmy.ml
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                8 days ago

                Last I checked Syria is in a much better situation today than it was when US started trying to destabilize it.

                Damascus today literally has blackouts daily. The US started fucking with Syria after 9/11. The Syrian energy grid was gravely damaged in 2011.

                The economic situation is improving

                Their GDP is not even hitting 2% growth by any realistic estimates, they’re not releasing accurate data anyway. Some years in 2020-2024 the estimate of GDP growth is negative.

                Assad has more popular support than any western regime leaders.

                I mean, you should go to Damascus and try to express dissent against Assad.

                This shit is silly dude.

                • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
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                  8 days ago

                  Damascus today literally has blackouts daily. The US started fucking with Syria after 9/11. The Syrian energy grid was gravely damaged in 2011.

                  You did not address the point I made which is that the situation has clearly improved. The fact that you can’t even acknowledge this basic fact is astounding. Syria was on the verge of collapse with US backed extremists marching on Damascus. Today, the government is firmly in control of most of the territory and economy is stabilizing.

                  Their GDP is not even hitting 2% growth by any realistic estimates, they’re not releasing accurate data anyway. Some years in 2020-2024 the estimate of GDP growth is negative.

                  Same goes for Germany and most of the EU, what’s your point here?

                  Trump got 3x the votes of the population of Syria. Biden’s approval rating is 38.6%, the US VEP population is 253,272,570, some light math puts Biden’s approval at 97,763,212 people.

                  What point are you even trying to make here?

                  • _pi@lemmy.ml
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                    8 days ago

                    You did not address the point I made which is that the situation has clearly improved.

                    Yeah and you did not address the point I made which is the situation got gravely worse and is abjectly horrible

                     Same goes for Germany and most of the EU, what’s your point here?
                    

                    You love having a selective understanding of economics. Small underdeveloped economy, small percentage growth = very bad. Large global economy, small percentage growth = good. Remember how we were talking about global south markets in the other thread? What happened to all of that?

                    What point are you even trying to make here?

                    I was trying to make a joke, because attempting to qualify Assad support is the lulziest shit when he’s effectively an absolute monarch of a ruin.

      • FortifiedAttack [any]@hexbear.net
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        8 days ago

        I’m not changing any story. If you go back to the start of the discussion then you’ll see that it’s the same thing I keep trying to explain to you over and over throughout this thread.

        Yeah reading through this thread I’m getting very strong contrarian debatebro vibes from _pi. Constantly deflecting the topic of discussion and going on irrelevant tangents.

        I wouldn’t engage any further, this is just a waste of time.