Thanks for your response, Consul. Allow me to take issue with a few points.
Symmachus wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 pm
Was it the result of a robust national identity or the fact that Ukraine has a massive military (thanks to the US and allies)? I am skeptical of all this. Why are the Ukrainians enforcing conscription and controlling
the flow of Ukrainian men from and inside the country? I don't know about you, but if Mexico invaded the US, there probably wouldn't be much worry from the government that Americans would flee to Mexico or even Canada.
I can’t argue with such a trustworthy news source as
The Guardian, as in the two-month-old article you linked, the paper questions the validity of their own headline (
Ukraine’s military plans to limit free movement to make conscription easier). In the body of the article: “It remains unclear if movement permits for men will be introduced…” and "President Volodymyr Zelenskiy criticised the announcement in his nightly TV address to the nation on Tuesday, saying that the general staff should not make decisions without him. Two parliamentarians immediately filed draft legislation that would scrap the army’s initiative, which they described as 'outdated'."
Even aside from that, I can’t treat this as a serious argument. If Mexico were three times the size of the US, with three times the population; had nuclear weapons while we had none; had a million active duty troops compared to our 250,000; had an annual military budget of 48 billion dollars compared to our 5 billion; had land borders on three sides of our country; and had the ability to block our only waterway—then yes, I think some folks in the US would be running to Canada and Poland and France as well as trying to repatriate to Mexico. The US had to draft men during WWII, when evil was seemingly clearly defined, and conscripts hotfooted it to Canada rather than be drafted to fill some clerk position during our experience in SE Asia. Ukraine's performance, as evidence of their feelings of a national identity, compares favorably.
What’s interesting to me, is how few Ukrainians, among those who flee the country, choose to go to benevolent Mother Russia.
Symmachus wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 pm
But if they did, we have to wonder whether such people really had such a strong national identity after all. So, presumably, Ukraine wouldn't need to force a population to fight if that population had such a strong national identity. Added to this is the fact that Ukraine does not appear to have a manpower shortage as much as a shortage of materiel (which is why we keeping sending them money and weapons), which suggests something else is going on.
What does it suggest is going on?
Symmachus wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 pm
And who knows what Putin thinks? I have heard so many different theories, all of which say more about the theorist than Putin.
Forgive me, but this is one of those meaningless clichés that could be ventured about any theory and its advocate.
Symmachus wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 pm
We still don't really know what Russian war aims are—and perhaps the Russians do not either!
No, we don't, but it might be fair to speculate. On second thought, it might be not just be fair to speculate but also important to do so.
Symmachus wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 pm
Which surely would be the most Russian thing of all time. It really amazes me the competence that we attribute to the Russian government. The Facebook memes many in the US believe were used to install Trump were hilariously bad and ineffective, but I wouldn't go on an Aeroflot plane if you paid me. My favorite exhibit at the National Air and Space Museum was some soviet space equipment on loan which included one of the suits used in some mission or other that went outside of the space craft (equivalent to the US Gemini program): it had a piece of wood to which different parts of the suit were connected with screws—fVcking wood in space! Just glorious.
(enter Physics Guy to explain why the wood was genius idea)
I remember that [ 'artificially created country' argument was one of the intellectual / technocratic justifications for the US going into Iraq] was part of the discussion, but I don't recall anyone using that, at least in the US, as justification for the invasion of Iraq; it was all about freedom, democracy, Al Qaeda, and weapons of mass destruction, never about Kurds getting a country or anything like that. In any case I am not justifying anything. My point was about western narratives that there is some inherent sanctity to having national borders that overrides any interest that Russia may have, and therefore that supporting Ukraine in an unthinking way is ipso facto justified because of that. Just about every response to my earlier post is a variation of that: "well, maybe that is so, but the minute they crossed the border they earned the death penalty and we must fight them."
Or perhaps it was, "Well, maybe that is so, but the minute they crossed the border and started killing people, shelling homes, and demanding we let them govern us, we must fight them."
Symmachus wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 pm
It could be said [that Russia is a fragile state], but I just don't see it as anything but wishful thinking and—once again—another narrative tool that is only useful to the extent it reflects what is real. So how does it actually reflect something real? Why didn't Russia do this earlier? Is support of a war proof-positive that it was done for this reason another? It just seems like something a journalist or analyst would come up with because it is a cliché and they only think in cliches because—to get back to my very first post—they don't really understand these places or people—they don't even try to.
A moment ago, you were demonstrating proofs to Russia’s incompetence, now you call the notion of their fragility a cliché.
Symmachus wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 9:40 pm
Again, Stephen Kotkin is great on this; he denounces the kind of regime Putin has but not without pointing out—much to the discomfort of commentators who rely on pre-made narratives—that it has been successful because it has co-opted so many people into it. A lot of people have an interest in keeping Putin's regime going. And even if it were someone else, it would be just someone else, not a different regime. Putin has not invented this pattern but is adapting the technologies of governance and administration that have long been a part of Russian life.
Unless I'm misreading him, Stephen Kotkin is also great on the idea that American intelligence did a bang up job in its assessment of Russia, that not taking the opportunity to expand both NATO and democratic ideals would have been a mistake, and that this conflict is an unmatched opportunity for the West to get things right.