Originally Posted by
jclay
Which is why a very careful, very slow, very long term plan of managing a very difficult, sensitive situation involving a volatile and destructive personality and political reality running a very complicated country with a complex history and cultural pastiche, is required, is paramount; as is the recognition that we’re dealing with a nuclear armed power and that we will likely not achieve our goals (even if purely noble) in a single lifetime.
Putin gets no pass from me; what I advocate is a clear eyed view of reality, of what is possible and what isn’t and that when dealing with a nuclear armed country run by a, from this layman’s perspective and which you just MOL confirmed, psychopath, one had better tread extraordinarily carefully with an eye towards, above above all else, not destabilizing the situation. Think of dealing with Putin as you would walking across a mine field...in the dark, and it isn’t flat and happy dirt. It doesn’t matter how long it takes, and you can’t do just anything you want (lie down, stomp your feet, or even take a leak without serious planning) during the traverse; what matters, the only thing that matters, is that you don’t step on a mine.
For the seasoned foreign policy experts who didn’t subscribe to limitless, pre-ordained US arm wrestling victories, Putin’s annexation of Crimea was a foregone conclusion, given the culmination of several decades of western, largely US, stressors. That’s not a pass; metaphorically that’s acknowledging quacking, seeing webbed feet, duck poop and a water bird that looks and behaves an awful lot like a duck. It R what it R and we can’t change it. But we can piss it off, or recognize it for what it is, for the intrinsic limitations on our actions, and plan accordingly. It's not got a lot with what Ukrainians desire; it's got everything to do with what's possible at any particular time and over the future.
The US obviously still feels that it can act with impunity towards anyone. That is a recipe for disaster and something that we would never tolerate; I needn’t mention the examples….or our relationship with China and the fun that’s in store for the planet there if we don’t get a lot more clever, work on incentives that move all of us in a sustainable direction, and realize that we can easily trip things up to the point that through fuck-up, avarice or honest mistake we suddenly find ourselves in the middle of a nuclear exchange. That’s not hyperbole; we’ve been on the brink before....why would we think that we won't be again given global tensions and human frailty?
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