This sense of entitlement to land beyond its borders and also the erroneous understanding of how the majority who live in those lands feel about their independence, seems to have led Putin (and maybe Russians) into a series of trapdoors.
We have seen some indication that parts of Serbia still favour Russia. But not so the battle scarred Bosnia whose sense of independence hardened through the battle for it.
Ukraine seems to be strengthening their narrative of resistance, suffering and heroic struggle too.
Looking back at Russia’s early efforts to westernise & democratise & its descent into gangster capitalism where a tiny élite became fabulously rich by plundering the assets of major industries, especially oil & gas.
In 1998 Russia defaulted & the rouble crashed also under Putin
People queued for hours at the bank hoping to withdraw dollars or GBP only to watch the rouble drop before their eyes and their life saving vanish.
On a dacha near the border with Ukraine a graduate mining engineer rued the day Stalin’s Russia was lost
Nearly everything they ate that year was grown on his acre of land with the rest bartered
He had not used cash for 18 months.
Ukrainians would disagree with him about Stalin
I did a thread on how Stalin enforced Ukrainian famine- Holodomor- in the 1930s. He called the resisting Ukrainians “Enemies of the State” and “Saboteurs.”
Straight from Stalin to the front pages of the Daily Mail, the S**, the Telegraph and the Express,
Stalin then regarded Ukraine as a Russian frontier land, whereby substance farmers who owned their own land should surrender it to enable the forming of large collectives for the common good of Russia.
In fact “Ukraine” comes from the Russian word for “edge” or periphery
3.9 million Ukrainians starved to death under those Stalin years. Those that survived understandably craved independence.
Putin appears to be making the same error wanting Ukraine brought back into the Russian fold and has overreached himself.
And where is China in all this? It suits Beijing to challenge the the US$ as the reserve currency by carving out a distinct yuan zone as an alternative space in the global economy, more protected from future sanctions.
But it is also a war of democracy v authoritarianism
Yalta v Helsinki
The former where great powers redrew the map of Europe in 1945
The latter springing from the Helsinki Final Act of 1975 which describes a Europe of independent sovereign states free to choose its own alliances
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The underlying comparison being hinted at is that the EU was somehow aligned to the Russia- Ukraine relationship, in (fictionally) preventing us from doing what a truly independent U.K. would otherwise do is not just downright insulting, it is a fucking disgrace.
Or to put it in the more polite but equally as trenchant sarcasm of @SnellArthur
Extraordinarily powerful essay on this Putin’s war from Maria Stepanova:- a poet & writer living in Russia. Her latest book, ‘In Memory of Memory’, was awarded the Big Book Prize, Russia’s main literary award, shortlisted for the International Booker Prize ft.com/content/c27974…
“This particular book has a bad author. Bad in all senses, as a person and as a writer with scant interest in his own characters. He doesn’t care if they survive or die; he doesn’t care what their needs or desires are; &he’s definitely not interested in recognising their freedoms
“The only thing that he cares about is his own authorship, the affirmation of his will, and his control of the text and events.”
85% of S Korea’s 50 mill population is fully vaxxed & 60% boosted yet Thursday 17-3-22 was its deadliest day during the pandemic, with 429 deaths in a 24-hour period and 621,328 cases, up 55% from 400,730 the day before.
“In recent weeks, South Korea has relaxed social distancing rules by pushing back a curfew on restaurants to 11 p.m. and easing the cap on private gatherings to six.”
“ Critics said the government underestimated the highly contagious nature of the omicron variant and eased the social distancing rules too soon, contributing to a surge in cases.”
Pfizer is the vaccine most deployed in South Korea.
Tom Hunt, Conservative MP for Ipswich since 2019, was previously the political assistant and chief of staff to the Conservative mayor of the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority (CPCA). This is a politically restricted post.
“The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which goes by the abbreviation ICCPR, it’s perhaps the most important international human rights treaty or certainly one of the three most important.”
“This was negotiated back in the 1960s, and it’s a treaty that has very wide acceptance around the world. Article 20 of this treaty basically states that any propaganda for war shall be prohibited by law. “
Turns out the Soviet Union was a strong proponent of it.