Aseahawkfan wrote:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poisoning_of_Alexander_Litvinenko
Remember when Putin ordered the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko with radioactive poison.
The West has been letting this thug Putin have his way for twenty plus years and we have made him a worse and worse monster with our weakness.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The chances of Putin backing down to sanctions from the West is so low as to be infinitesimal.
RiverDog wrote:These aren't your garden variety sanctions. As a matter of fact, we shouldn't even be referring to them as such because they bear little resemblance to anything that has been initiated since the term came into use. These are economic counter measures that are equivalent in nature to a naval blockade or the mining of a harbor. They are as effective as bombing a power plant or blowing up a dam.
The only problem with them is that they take quite a long time to work when compared to bombing a power plant or blowing up a dam. It's going to take some time for Russian citizens to come to the realization that this war is costing them their livelihoods and even more time to organize an effort and come up with the courage to overturn their regime. Their effect may not come in time to avert major destruction and loss of life.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I will post this again: The chances of Putin backing down to sanctions from the West is so low as to be infinitesimal.
You do not understand or accept who Vladimir Putin is at all. You just don't get this guy. You probably never will until he does something so heinous even people like you will wake up this guy doesn't care about sanctions or words or anything of the kind. He is Joseph Stalin reborn. Stalin cared about nothing but power and violence.
This PoS knows the entire world has suffered immense loss of life from a global pandemic and to a vile human being like Putin this is an "opportunity" to take more of what he wants while the world is weak reeling from a pandemic. You seem to think a man like this cares about sanctions or his people or who hasn't prepared for possible revolution. He doesn't care.
Good lord how many fricking times do people like you have to keep trying to convince yourself that men like Putin give a rat's ass as they keep doing what they're doing until we have to kill them. Saddam sanctions? Didn't care. Iran sanctions? Didn't care. Still developing nuclear weapons. Kim Jong Un? Sanctions? Just launched a missile test. Doesn't care.
Why do you keep wanting to give these guys more time to build even greater power and the cost of life to take them down become even greater. Why can't you just see Putin is an evil man who won't be stopped by sanctions and won't look weak towards The West.
I-5 wrote:Seems like you're suggesting an all out nuclear war that will end civilization as we know it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I will post this again: The chances of Putin backing down to sanctions from the West is so low as to be infinitesimal.
You do not understand or accept who Vladimir Putin is at all. You just don't get this guy. You probably never will until he does something so heinous even people like you will wake up this guy doesn't care about sanctions or words or anything of the kind. He is Joseph Stalin reborn. Stalin cared about nothing but power and violence.
RiverDog wrote:And apparently you don't understand or accept what it must be like to live in a country with a scumbag like Putin running it.
You just got through lecturing me in another thread how, without hardly any evidence, that it was almost a slam dunk that Epstein was killed due to a conspiracy, yet you seem to reject the notion that these sanctions and other measures that have isolated Russia from most of the rest of the world could result in a coup d'état, assassination, or forcible removal of Vladimir Putin. You seem to think that all 140 million Russians are nothing but a bunch of Stepford Wifes, taking their orders directly from Putin and would willingly march off a cliff for him.
tarlhawk wrote:Seen a few posts on other sites questioning the use of assassination to take out another country's leader. Just as sanctioning a "no-fly" zone...an assassination attempt would be an act of war and all that it implies. Found this 2002 article on the Hoover Institute website...
From Hoover Digest of Hoover Institute website:
Is Assassination an Option?
by Bruce Berkowitz
Wednesday, January 30, 2002
Is It Legal?
You might be surprised to learn that there are no international laws banning assassination. The closest thing to a prohibition is the 1973 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes Against Internationally Protected Persons, Including Diplomatic Agents. This treaty (which the United States signed) bans attacks against heads of state while they conduct formal functions, heads of government while they travel abroad, and diplomats while they perform their duties.
The Protected Persons Convention was intended to ensure that governments could function and negotiate even during war. Without it, countries might start a war (or get drawn into one) and then find themselves unable to stop because there was no leader at home to make the decision to do so and because their representatives were getting picked off on their way to cease-fire negotiations.
Another treaty that some might construe as an assassination ban is the Hague Convention on the "laws and customs" of war. The Hague Convention states that "the right of belligerents to adopt means of injuring the enemy is not unlimited." (This was a bold statement in 1907, when the convention was signed.)
The Hague Convention tried to draw a sharp line between combatants and noncombatants; combatants were entitled to the convention’s protections but were also obliged to obey its rules. For example, the Hague Convention tried to distinguish combatants by requiring them to wear a "fixed distinctive emblem recognizable at a distance." Wear the emblem while fighting, and you are entitled to be treated as a POW if captured; fail to follow the dress code, and you might be hanged as a mere bandit.
Alas, maintaining this definition of a "combatant" proved a losing battle throughout the twentieth century. Guerrilla warfare transformed civilians into soldiers. Strategic bombing transformed civilians into targets. Headquarters staff, defense ministers, and civilian commanders in chief today are all more likely to wear suits than uniforms. Teenage paramilitary soldiers in Liberia are lucky to have a pair of Levis to go along with their AK-47s, let alone fatigues or insignia. That is why, practically speaking, a "combatant" today is anyone who is part of a military chain of command.
The third international agreement that is relevant to assassination is the Charter of the United Nations, which allows countries to use military force in the name of self-defense. If a country can justify a war as "defensive," it can kill any person in the enemy’s military chain of command that it can shoot, bomb, burn, or otherwise eliminate. And it can use whatever "ruses of war" it needs to get the job done. As a result, the main legal constraints on sanctioned assassination other than domestic law, which makes murder a crime in almost all countries, are rules that nations impose on themselves.
The U.S. government adopted such a ban in 1976, when President Ford—responding to the scandal that resulted when the press revealed CIA involvement in several assassinations—issued Executive Order 11905. This order prohibited what it called "political assassination" and essentially reaffirmed an often-overlooked ban that Director of Central Intelligence Richard Helms had adopted for the CIA four years earlier. Jimmy Carter reaffirmed the ban in 1978 with his own Executive Order 12036. Ronald Reagan went even further in 1981; his Executive Order 12333 banned assassination in toto. This ban on assassination remains in effect today.
...we should be clear in our own minds that, when the United States tries to assassinate someone, we are going to war—with all the risks and costs that war brings. These include, for example, diplomatic consequences, the danger of escalation, the threat of retaliation against our own leaders, the threat of retaliation against American civilians, and so on.
Because assassination is an act of war, such activities should always be considered a military operation. American leaders need to resist the temptation to use intelligence organizations for this mission. Intelligence organizations are outside the military chain of command. Intelligence operatives are not expected to obey the rules of war and thus are not protected by those rules.
tarlhawk wrote:Because assassination is an act of war, such activities should always be considered a military operation. American leaders need to resist the temptation to use intelligence organizations for this mission. Intelligence organizations are outside the military chain of command. Intelligence operatives are not expected to obey the rules of war and thus are not protected by those rules.
Hawktawk wrote:Lindsey Graham blurted out “ someone needs to take this guy out !” Yesterday . What a fool . You don’t say it . I fear the sanctions may be so crippling ,the whole world against him he may just say WTF. Putin thinks his weapons are so far superior to ours , their training is so much more active scenarios that he can win a nuclear war . Doesn’t matter If it’s true . But I think we need to start thinking about how far down to drag Russia and the overwhelming majority of good people there who are protesting . Putin is invoking martial law. Prominent critic Gary Kasparov said yesterday Putin will attack a nato country to see our response . They shelled the largest nuclear power plant in Europe. It is helter skelter on steroids .
I-5 wrote:I have to disagree, Riv. Even if every american (every responsible world citizen even) is thinking the same thing, I was thinking what a fool for a US Senator to say it. It doesn't help the situation at all, just gives Putin yet another reason to double down. Putin has always been cunning and calculated, but he resembles a cornered and wounded animal at the moment, and that's not a good thing when he has access to the world's second largest nuclear stockpile. I wish I had the answers, but he is so unpredictable that no one knows. I agree that we can't do nothing, but what can we do?
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I read the post comparing this to WW2 Germany, but perhaps WW2 Japan is a better parallel (aside from Putin being the closest thing to a Hitler or Stalin since then). Japan felt that they had the right to dominate Asia and saw no reason why they shouldn’t have their turn at colonialism like the Western powers. Soon after they start flexing, they get loud disapproval from the West and then economic sanctions that freeze their assets in western countries and cut off supplies of scrap metal and oil. So Japan, a proud nation with somewhat recent victories over larger nations (China 1890s; Russia 1908), has the great powers condemning them for exactly the same path those nations embarked on previously and then cutting off their primary means of making war materials and movement. So do they back off and subordinate themselves to the West with the attendant loss of face, or do they give the West the finger and take what they believe is theirs by right? We know how that turned out.
Now that he’s stuck is foot in it, is Putin willing to suffer a loss of face? If not, what will he do? Is there a way to diffuse this without Putin losing his mind? It’s a tough situation all around, and, more and more, my money is on him not being willing to back down and humble himself to the West much like Japan was unwilling to do.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I read the post comparing this to WW2 Germany, but perhaps WW2 Japan is a better parallel (aside from Putin being the closest thing to a Hitler or Stalin since then). Japan felt that they had the right to dominate Asia and saw no reason why they shouldn’t have their turn at colonialism like the Western powers. Soon after they start flexing, they get loud disapproval from the West and then economic sanctions that freeze their assets in western countries and cut off supplies of scrap metal and oil. So Japan, a proud nation with somewhat recent victories over larger nations (China 1890s; Russia 1908), has the great powers condemning them for exactly the same path those nations embarked on previously and then cutting off their primary means of making war materials and movement. So do they back off and subordinate themselves to the West with the attendant loss of face, or do they give the West the finger and take what they believe is theirs by right? We know how that turned out.
Now that he’s stuck is foot in it, is Putin willing to suffer a loss of face? If not, what will he do? Is there a way to diffuse this without Putin losing his mind? It’s a tough situation all around, and, more and more, my money is on him not being willing to back down and humble himself to the West much like Japan was unwilling to do.
I-5 wrote:Great post, and I agree about the Japan example. For sure, there is a fair amount of hypocrisy whenever a superpower has issues with an emerging superpower doing the exact same thing. It will always be that way. I am biased, but I fall on the US version of imperialism because we have a more democratic culture that holds up the individual. But I know that very statement is open to giant debate lol.
I also think that Putin isn't going to back down, just like a cornered dog isn't going to back down. Riv, I wasn't implying that Lindsay Graham's flippant comment was going to push Putin over the edge, but just give him yet another reason to stick his head in the sand and stick to his terrible ideas.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I read where they are arresting protesters and passing a law allowing for prosecuting the act of spreading misinformation about the “special operations” and handing out 15 year sentences in jail. Not surprising, but they are clearly seeking to stamp out any and all opposition to the invasion among their citizens. Unpopularity on the home front among both the regular joes and janes and the elites may help end this.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I read where they are arresting protesters and passing a law allowing for prosecuting the act of spreading misinformation about the “special operations” and handing out 15 year sentences in jail. Not surprising, but they are clearly seeking to stamp out any and all opposition to the invasion among their citizens. Unpopularity on the home front among both the regular joes and janes and the elites may help end this.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Now Putin has stated the economic sanctions are akin to a declaration of war. He really believes he should be able to do what he wants.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Now Putin has stated the economic sanctions are akin to a declaration of war. He really believes he should be able to do what he wants.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I'm honestly starting to think he expected Trump to be in office and win. Trump would have dragged his feet sanctioning Russia and not been interested in motivating our allies to stand against Putin. Hell, he might have spent his time creating chaos and attacking N.A.T.O. rather than move to stop Putin. Trump's failure to take the White House was likely one of events that did not work well for Putin as I think he had the plan to invade Ukraine during Donald's 2nd Term knowing he would have had a president who could not gain consensus amongst our allies because he disrespected them so much. Putin is old and he had to make his move rather than wait for Trump to possibly win in 2024. So he went for it with Biden hoping he was as soft as Obama on action and Biden has at least managed to pull the most devastating sanctions against Russia ever seen not only from America, but from the world. It seems to be getting worse. Getting Germany to buy in was the hard part.
I say go ahead Putin. Challenge America. We have been waiting for this fight for decades. We offered Russia peace and prosperity. His lies about N.A.T.O. moving too close are ridiculous. What is America going to do? Sell them Big Macs and Iphones? He's full of it.
I say challenge us Putin. Ramp it up, you piece of garbage. We'll end you and your entire regime. All your whack jobs around you will have to decide whether to die with you and Russia die too or end you.
We Americans will figure out a way to recover. That is what we do. We survive everything, recover from everything, and our people will use the ingenuity of all those that remain to recover from whatever evil you can manage. Our people work to build our nation. The entire world will help us rebuild other than a few scum. But we won't back down to Vladimir Putin, you piece of human trash. We will not be intimidated by Russia.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Oil at 124 a barrel. That is insane.
Hawktalk wrote:Putin is a cornered rat . China is distancing themselves now . But they are shelling ordinary citizens evacuating . Shelling the second nuclear reactor . They have 95% of the Russian military force in Ukraine . They really suck at ground war and apparently air war as they lost 9 aircraft yesterday alone . They have lost possibly 12 k troops , several high ranking generals killed .
For Ukrainian this is awesome. For the planet a 48 hour takeover would have been safer . I don’t think the world has ever been in more danger . I’ve been avoiding the thread . I’m a spirit led man . I feel a deep burden right now . I’m praying for peace.
I-5 wrote:HT, not to mention Putin’s police state just arrested 4500 demonstrators. That’s the biggest number I’ve seen yet. Oligarchs and Russian corporations are publicly calling him out. Of course he will double down again, but how much longer will his generals follow orders? A few high ranking ones have been killed already.
Hawktawk wrote:Russia is getting slaughtered , their troops are described as being decimated . But conscripts or no they can’t hang with the weapons of the big green machine and some of the Ukrainian engineers inexpensive drones that is slaughtering tanks .
Sergei Lavrov said today that the west supplying weapons to Ukraine and foreign mercenaries signing up is an act of war and will lead to “global collapse “ Once again a direct threat of nuclear war . It’s the only puppy dog left in the kennel . Other than that the guy is an evil little short man I’d love to spend a little time in the octagon with him . If someone has their nukes in a holster Putin is going down. I really hope they do .
Aseahawkfan wrote:You have woken us up Putin. You have woken America up.
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