Neil Abrams Profile picture
Sep 16 16 tweets 5 min read
I think this guy is arguing in good faith. But to believe that depriving Ukraine of weapons constitutes an “anti-imperialist” stance requires also believing Russia’s invasion *isn’t* imperialist. That, in turn, requires believing a number of things that are untenable IMO.
The notion that opposing arms transfers to Ukraine is anti-imperialist hinges on the view that Russia only invaded because it was provoked by a (supposedly) imperialist NATO alliance. But consider the things you’d have to accept in order to think that:
It requires believing there are legitimate reasons why Putin barely raised a fuss over Sweden and Finland’s accession to NATO yet viewed the prospect of *Ukraine* joining NATO as so real and so dire that it necessitated a full-scale invasion.
There are, in fact, no legitimate reasons for this. Putin well knew that, so long as Russia continued to occupy parts of Ukrainian territory, which it’s been doing directly and indirectly since 2014, NATO couldn’t admit Ukraine. To do so would trigger nuclear Armageddon.
To believe that an imperialist NATO provoked the war—and, in turn, that withholding arms from Ukraine actually constitutes an anti-imperialist position—requires believing a number of additional things that are equally unconvincing.
It requires believing that, absent NATO expansion, Russia would have accepted the humiliation of the Soviet collapse and accompanying loss of half its territory and population and become—for the first time ever—a satisfied power with no territorial designs on its neighbors.
It requires believing that, absent NATO membership, the ex-Soviet Baltic States would today remain free and independent of Russian domination. I’d argue their NATO membership is the only reason the Baltics are *not* getting attacked while non-NATO Ukraine *is* getting attacked
It requires believing that, when top Putin aide Dmitry Medvedev called Georgia and Kazakhstan “artificial states” and vowed to reincorporate all the ex-Soviet republics into Russia, he didn’t mean it and what he really meant was that the war was about NATO.
It requires believing that, when the Kremlin permits the sort of genocidal rhetoric below to air on state TV, it doesn’t reflect any special antipathy towards Ukrainians or their right to an independent state. Instead, the Kremlin’s real concern is NATO.
It requires believing that when Vladimir Solovyov, the Kremlin’s top media propagandist, stated that the war’s objective was “liberating a part of Russia…from its German, Anglo-Saxon, and Jewish colonizers,” he actually meant the war was about NATO.
It requires believing that Putin didn’t really mean it when he called Ukraine an artificial creation “on the lands of historical Russia” and said “Russia was robbed” by the creation of a separate Ukrainian Soviet republic. His real concern was NATO.
en.wikisource.org/wiki/On_the_Hi…
It requires believing that when Putin referred to Ukraine as “an inalienable part of our own history, culture, and spiritual space” he didn’t really mean it and that his real concern was NATO. americanrhetoric.com/speeches/vladi…
It requires believing that when Putin declared that Russia “cannot allow an anti-Russia to be created on Russia’s historical territory” he didn’t really mean it. His true concern wasn’t reclaiming Russia’s lost imperial holdings but rather NATO expansion.
It requires believing that, when Putin publicly admitted that the goal of the invasion was to “get our lands back,” he didn’t really mean it and what he really meant was that it was about NATO expansion.
In sum, the idea that the invasion is *not* imperialist and that the true anti-imperialist position is to withhold arms from Ukraine rests on numerous premises that are practically inconceivable. Far from anti-imperialist, then, not arming Ukraine is actually pro-imperialist.
Addendum: As @EdwinH47291839 pointed out in a reply, it also requires believing that NATO expanded by prodding and cajoling reluctant Eastern European states to join when the reality was exactly the opposite—precisely because they feared renewed Russian imperialism. See this🧵

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More from @neil_abrams

May 23
⬇️ Summary of Germany’s new finding that entire detachments of Russian Nazis are fighting in Ukraine, as they were during the earlier Donbas rebellion.

Turns out the tankies clutching their pearls over Azov Nazis are—stunningly—acting in bad faith.

themoscowtimes.com/2022/05/23/rus…
For those interested, here’s more on the various Nazis Putin’s regime literally shipped to Ukraine in 2014 to lead the rebellion in Donetsk and Luhansk.

interpretermag.com/russia-this-we…
Note: The reason Russia had to send these guys in the first place in 2014 was that local support was not remotely adequate to initiate or sustain an insurgency. Without Russia’s backing and day-to-day management, there would have been no separatist rebellion from 2014-22.
Read 10 tweets
Apr 11
Folks, @TheGrayzone’s back with another flagrantly dishonest article claiming that Russian atrocities—this time in Mariupol and Bucha—were false-flags by Ukraine. Their latest journalistic farce further exposes them as purveyors of unvarnished propaganda. Let’s dig in.
@THEGRAYZONE The author of the piece is @KitKlarenberg, a former contributor to Sputnik News, a Kremlin-propaganda outlet. You may remember Sputnik from such classics as “Obama & Hillary created ISIS!,” “Covid is an Anglo-Saxon plot!” and “Democrats probably killed Seth Rich!”
Read 78 tweets
Mar 22
OK, so @MaxBlumenthal of @TheGrayzoneNews recently published an article claiming that Russia’s bombing of a Mariupol theater was actually a false-flag operation carried out by Ukraine’s Azov Battalion. Reader, this is one dishonest article, and I’m about to show you why. Thread:
@MaxBlumenthal @TheGrayzoneNews The bombing occurred a week ago. Locals, in an attempt to dissuade Russia from attacking it, had written “children” on the ground outside in letters so big they could be seen from space satellites. But was it really a false-flag operation by Ukrainian forces? Let’s dig in.
@MaxBlumenthal @TheGrayzoneNews Before we get into it, though, here’s a link to Blumenthal’s piece for your reference: thegrayzone.com/2022/03/18/bom…
Read 89 tweets
Feb 2
If Dems did as Rs do and met every new GOP outrage with unified, relentless denunciation, the media would have no choice *but* to cover it. It would saturate the media narrative for days & put Rs on the defensive.

A running thread of missed opportunities:
Republicans understand the importance of coordinated, vigorous campaigns to shape the media narrative. Dems just don’t. So *of course* the media will tend to overlook GOP fascism, amplify GOP talking points, and criticize Dems over nonsense.
Politics is not just about policy. It’s also about winning the daily media narrative. Unless and until Dems figure this out and start projecting dominance, they’ll keep getting hosed in the messaging war and look impotent in the public mind.
Read 107 tweets
Jun 3, 2021
Almost every Democrat in America recognizes the dire GOP threat to democracy and the common-sense reforms needed to save it--except a handful of fellow liberal obstructionists in key positions advancing myopic arguments that are prima facie ridiculous.
There's Manchin and Sinema's arguments against scrapping the filibuster, which are not only ahistorical but so obviously illogical that one struggles to understand how they possibly believe themselves. nym.ag/2TAB2g5
Then there's Stephen Breyer, who not only refuses to retire, who not only proposes the absurd argument that the Court is *not*, in fact, partisan, and who not only thinks *Dems* are the real threat to the rule of law by proposing Court reforms, but... bit.ly/3ic9tEc
Read 8 tweets
Jun 2, 2021
Post-Vietnam Dems have gotten so used to emasculating themselves before Republicans that they can't even conceive of a world in which they could possibly defeat the fascist threat the GOP poses. The thing is,
Republicans, by virtue of their *everyday conduct*, are debasing themselves and everything their party (supposedly) once stood for. But not enough people will come to realize this on their own. They need their leaders to point it out for them, consistently and in unison.
Psychologists have long noted how voters, thanks to human nature, crave displays of strength and dominance from leaders. For ex, see this:
Read 6 tweets

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