Zenzibar wrote:thebuzzardman wrote:Zenzibar wrote:
Morning, ah nope.
It took all of 15-20 minutes of my time to listen. But this panel consist of John Mearsheimer, an International scholar, West Point graduate, United States Military Academy graduate and laureate. According to his profile, Wearsheimer is considered to be the "most influential realist of his generation".
If one is interested in garnering a wider, unbiased perspective of this war, this is your man.
Cool. If the Russians view Ukraine joining NATO as an existential threat and therefore anything they do is justified, then clearly the USA, seeing movements for freedom in South and Central America as threats to it's interests and therefore backed military juanta and right wing death squads is also A-Ok, because I bet if you queried most of the rulers, they'd tell you it was a threat. Or still is.
You're well read.
Absolutely.
From Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower sending military "advisors" to Costa Rica in the late 50's to quell an attempt to unionize the United Fruit Company to Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua, Augusto Pinochet in Chile, Maurice Bishop in Grenada, etc. are such examples of intervention when "national interests" (Corporate) was/is threatened.
Ultimately, this is another war (Ukraine) that is about corporate/national interests.
I get that Crimea (2014) for Russia is about maintaining access to a warm weather port.
But, vast natural gas fields were discovered off the crimea about 5 years earlier.
So, the move could have been/be to deny Ukraine the ability to compete with Russia in Europe in the natural gas market.
I figured that was it.
I didn't realize a large natural gas field located on land was discovered as well. Location? The Donbas region. Just a few years before Russia moved in there.
So, my concern, mapping to the idea of a mutual settlement from the Kennan school, is the Russians have no motivation to let the Ukraine be a competitor of their best natural resource asset, and the Ukrainians aren't interested in being cut off from future profitable natural gas fields and also potentially be landlocked.
This isn't ending anytime soon, unfortunately