Scott
Verified User
You're referring to the time that they occurred. You've yet to make any statements on how they were different in nature.Over a hundred years of difference there, Scott.It seems you're having a hard time denying the parallels between the Spanish American war and the Russian Ukrainian war.
By your logic, we can justify slavery because it's in the Bible.
No, -that- would be a difference in kind, not a difference in time. I'm also not Christian, so while I can respect the bible as being apparently derived at least in part by historical records, that doesn't mean I think that what happens therein must be justified just because it's in there.
Sorry, dude, but while there are parallels what you are actually doing it saying Putin is 100 years behind the times.
No, what I'm trying to convey is that when a powerful nation feels that a neighbour is threatening them in some way, said neighbour generally tends to get invaded by its more powerful neighbour. The U.S. has gone to great lengths to portray nations that weren't a threat as a threat just to get its population on side. A good example is the Iraq invasion.
[Putin's] a thug and the sooner a Russian patriot pushes him out of a ten-story window, the better for the Russian people and also the Ukrainian people. Let peace reign over the land.
You honestly believe that if Putin were killed that Russia would decide to pack its bags in Ukraine and head home? If anything, I think his replacement would be even -more- fervent in their desire to deal with the Ukrainian problem, and this would be especially true if there was even a whiff of Ukraine being the cause of Putin's demise.
Going back to your Spanish-American War scenario, don't forget that GITMO was leased from the Cubans. Same for the US bases in the Philippines; we didn't take them, we leased them. Putin needed access to a warm water port. Specifically Sevastopol Naval Base and easy access to it. Why didn't he offer to work out a financial deal to lease the base and access to it or make a joint base?
He did, way back in 2010. American Professor and Statesman Jeffrey Sachs gets into this in the speech/article that I've quoted to you before. Quoting that specific part, colorizing the most important word in red:
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As you know, Viktor Yanukovych was elected as president of Ukraine in 2010 on the platform of Ukraine’s neutrality. Russia had no territorial interests or designs in Ukraine at all. I know. I was there off-and-on during these years. What Russia was negotiating during 2010 was a 25-year lease to 2042 for Sevastopol naval base. That’s it. There were no Russian demands for Crimea, or for the Donbas. Nothing like that at all. The idea that Putin is reconstructing the Russian empire is childish propaganda. Excuse me.
If anyone knows the day-to-day and year-to-year history, this is childish stuff. Yet childish stuff seems to work better than adult stuff. So, there were no territorial demands at all before the 2014 coup [in Ukraine]. Yet the United States decided that Yanukovych must be overthrown because he favored neutrality and opposed NATO enlargement. It’s called a regime change operation.
There have been around one hundred regime-change operations by the U.S. since 1947, many in your countries [speaking to the MEPs] and many all over the world.
(Political scientist Lindsey O’Rourke documented 64 U.S. covert regime-change operations between 1947 and 1989, and concluded that “Regime change operations, especially those conducted covertly, have oft en led to prolonged instability, civil wars, and humanitarian crises in the affected regions.” See O’Rourke’s 2018 book, Covert Regime Change: America’s Secret Cold War. After 1989, there is ample evidence of the C.I.A. involved in Syria, Libya, Ukraine, Venezuela, and many other countries.)
That’s what the C.I.A. does for a living. Please know it. It’s a very unusual kind of foreign policy. In the American government, if you don’t like the other side, you don’t negotiate with them, you try to overthrow them, preferably, covertly. If it doesn’t work covertly, you do it overtly. You always say it’s not our fault. They’re the aggressor. They’re the other side.
They’re “Hitler.” That comes up every two or three years. Whether it’s Saddam Hussein, whether it’s [deposed Syrian President Bashar] al-Assad, whether it’s Putin, that’s very convenient. That’s the only foreign policy explanation the American people are ever given. Well, we’re facing Munich 1938. We can’t talk to the other side. They’re evil and implacable foes. That’s the only model of foreign policy we ever hear from our government and mass media. The mass media repeats it entirely because it’s completely suborned by the U.S. government.
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Full article:

Jeffrey Sachs: The Geopolitics of Peace
The author explains manipulative U.S. post-war foreign policy to European MPs, explodes myths about Ukraine and urges an independent European foreign policy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjcMoDFU1xg&ab_channel=MichaelvonderSchulenburg This is an edited transcript of Professor Jeffrey Sachs’
