A neutral Ukraine
Ukraine acts geographically as a buffer state between Russia and the West. Vladimir Putin is widely believed to have attacked Ukraine after western nations mooted the idea of the country joining the EU and NATO in the future, and over fears that Russia could end up with a US military presence on its doorstep. One could theorize that if the shoe was on the other foot, the US would probably also attack if Russia (theoretically) seized Mexico, and placed it's military and material right near the northern Mexican border with the US. Imagine a battery of Russian missiles installed in Mexico and directed towards the USA. In Russia's (poor) defense, one could say that Biden would be as delighted as Putin is, surrounded by countries armed by the USA. So Ukrainian leaders making it known that they want to join NATO, can be seen as a huge trigger point.
Wikipedia says about this: "Ukraine's relationship with NATO and Europe has been politically controversial Ukraine is one of eight countries in Eastern Europe with an Individual Partnership Action Plan. IPAPs began in 2002, and are open to countries that have the political will and ability to deepen their relationship with NATO. On 21 February 2019, the Constitution of Ukraine was amended, the norms on the strategic course of Ukraine for membership in the European Union and NATO are enshrined in the preamble of the Basic Law, three articles and transitional provisions. At the June 2021 Brussels Summit, NATO leaders reiterated the decision taken at the 2008 Bucharest Summit that Ukraine would become a member of the Alliance with the Membership Action Plan (MAP) as an integral part of the process and Ukraine's right to determine its own future and foreign policy, of course without outside interference. On 30 November 2021, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that an expansion of NATO's presence in Ukraine, especially the deployment of any long-range missiles capable of striking Russian cities or missile defence systems similar to those in Romania and Poland, would be a "red line" issue for Russia. Putin asked U.S. President Joe Biden for legal guarantees that NATO would not expand eastward or put "weapons systems that threaten us in close vicinity to Russian territory." However, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg was completely unimpressed and has staunchly replied that "It's only Ukraine and 30 NATO allies that decide when Ukraine is ready to join NATO. Russia has no veto, Russia has no say, and Russia has no right to establish a sphere of influence to try to control their neighbors." And: "As we support Ukraine in their aspirations to further integrate with Euro-Atlantic community and also aspirations for membership. Then it is for Ukraine to decide whether they would like to belong to NATO, and then it is for the 30 Allies to decide on the question of membership when Ukraine is ready to join. That is our right to decide. Russia has not the right to attack, to use violence, use their armed forces to invade an independent sovereign nation regardless of what they think about NATO membership, because that is not an excuse whatsoever, to use military force against a neighbor."
So, Putin wanted an agreement and the certainty that Ukraine will not become part of NATO and in effect, that NATO will not place military equipment alongside Ukraine's nearly 2000 kilometre long border with Russia. The need for this guarantee has been stressed by Russia for a long time now. Below you can see explain Putin this demand again to a western journalist. And Russia did not get that promise. I personally do not understand why the West and NATO are pushing the boundaries this way. Especially in light of the original agreements in the 1990's, about which you can read in a minute. But all this could very well be behind the current invasion of Ukraine. In that case, Putin wants to control Ukraine again and establish a puppet government named and installed by himself. He will have wanted to do so now, before Ukraine ever becomes part of NATO, because right now Ukraine has to fend for itself still. And to make Ukraine and Belarus Russia's "pre-square", with the possibility of stationing Russian troops there. If years, decades of peaceful talks and negotiations did not give Putin this result, his patience has dried up now I think, and he takes it by force. Putin also sees Ukraine as an extension of the West, infiltrated with American spies and intel services. Biden and his son's corrupt ties with Ukraine will not have helped there. The West is currently playing the saint in all this, but when you look at the bigger context, they are not innocent and have pushed and pushed despite clear warnings of the consequences. Now they cry wolf and sacrificed the lives of Ukrainians. I bet the USA would love to have Ukraine under its (NATO-)power, if only due to its strategic position. And in the below video, Putin basically says that he was trying to work closely with the USA on reforming Russia, only to find out that, behind his back, the USA were stoking the rebellion in Chechniya. It's all a right mess, as usual and I really hope that Europe gets is independent army as soon as possible, and won't be further dragged into America and Russia's never-ending dirty feuds. (Below Russian President Vladimir Putin answers the pivotal Ukraine/NATO question from Sky News' Diana Magnay. It was uploaded on December 23, 2021. This is the video original, but it is only visible in the USA I believe).
But another theory is that Putin has a long standing ideology of the Holy Russia. Seeing himself as a leader who stands above history; the saviour of the holy Russian nation and the Slavic people. And his mission is to bring all the slavic people together, and the heart of this slavic folk is Kiev. Ukraine's territory has long belonged to Russia in the past (both to the Russian Empire and to the Soviet Union), and in the mind of Putin it still belongs to 'historic Russia'. Putin loves statues of Tsars who played an important role in all this, such as Tsar Alexander II. After Russia humiliatingly lost the Crimea war in 1853-56, Alexander II has built Russia back up again, and led his people to a Crimea victory in 1873. A statue of this Tsar was not coincidentally facing Emmanuel Macron during the last meeting of the two, alongside that ridiculously long separating table. So perhaps the almost 70-year old Putin sees this as his last mission, acting as a tsar of sorts who regains slavic territory to create a Russian Empire again. I know, pretty megalomaniac. But he has ruled for 22 years now and has high aspirations clearly. Many Russian leaders developed a mental illness over time, paired with paranoia. Putin's covid-induced isolation of the past two years won't have helped, in that respect. And if this theory is true, Putin may not only want a buffer in between Russia and the West, in the shape of Ukraine and Belarus. But he may even aim for the Baltic states to be regained next and even Eastern European countries, in theory. Tsar Alexander II also took over Poland and Finland.. Let's hope this is just an insane theory. But already Russia has threatened its close Arctic neighbours Sweden and Finland with 'military consequences' if they join NATO. 'Finland and Sweden should not base their security on damaging the security of other countries and their accession to NATO can have detrimental consequences and face some military and political consequences,' foreign affairs spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said during a news briefing. 'Finland's accession to NATO would have serious military and political repercussions.' - The man has pride and no doubt wants to go out with a bang, being acknowledged as a big player on the world stage, revenging the humiliation imposed on him by the USA and the NATO too in a way. He considers it a failure and a mistake that the former Soviet states have been granted independence. And clearly now wants to control Ukraine and prevent it from sliding further down to the West, or ever become an EU member. He wants a legacy for sure, and once Russia has Ukraine back, they may not stop. For all we know he wants Hungary and other Eastern European countries back as well and then what... World War 3? They may nuke us all into oblivion then. But first Putin will want to take Ukraine, destroy its defences and install a 'puppet government' in Kyiv. Then he may want to make Russia great again and in 50 or 100 years he wants to be remembered as a great ruler of Russia. Reestablishing Russian Orthodox Christendom.
At the end of the Cold War, the United States promised Russia that NATO, the post-World War II anti-Soviet military alliance that has been the bedrock of Western security, wouldn’t expand “one inch eastward” of Germany. The U.S. by now denies that such a deal was ever struck, arguing there was never an explicit promise. However, hundreds of memos, meeting minutes and transcripts from U.S. archives supposedly indicate otherwise. After the Berlin Wall fell on November 9, 1989, it was a vital question for Europe whether a reunified Germany would be aligned with the United States (and NATO), the Soviet Union (and the Warsaw Pact) or neither. George Bush and his administration decided that NATO should include the reconstituted German republic. In early February 1990, U.S. leaders made the Soviets an offer. According to transcripts of meetings in Moscow on Feb. 9, then-Secretary of State James Baker suggested that in exchange for cooperation on Germany, the U.S. could make “iron-clad guarantees” that NATO would not expand “one inch eastward.” Less than a week later, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev agreed to begin reunification talks. No formal deal was struck, but from all the evidence, the quid pro quo was clear: Gorbachev acceded to Germany’s western alignment and the U.S. would limit NATO’s expansion.
In light of this, there is something to be said about the indignation from Russia about what has happened since. Internal memorandums and notes from that time show that U.S. policymakers soon realised that ruling out NATO’s expansion might not be in the best interests of the United States after all. NATO has since enlarged considerably, expanding to the east after all. Eastern-European and former Soviet (Warsaw Pact) countries like Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and Slovakia, as the former Soviet republics of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania are now all NATO members. Which grants them collective protection in the event of an attack by an external actor (in particular by Russia). And most of these countries have also become members of the European Union in the meantime. Russia watched unhappily as its once vast sphere of influence dwindled. And how a by now disputed major agreement was broken by the West. Basically, since the end of the Cold War, NATO expanded so much towards the East, that the strategic buffer that Russia had reduced from more than 2000 km's to less than a 1000. Russia blames the United States in particular for this, 'putting its frontline forces on our borders', according to Putin in 2007. I can see his point. Nato continues to deny everything... Ukraine for a long time stayed kind of neutral in all this (aside from far eastern rebels, wanting to belong to Russia), and was led by corrupt politicians and oligarchs. Until 2004, when re-elections after the orange-revolution ensured a break, allowing opposition leader Viktor Yuschenko to win. Yuschenko survived an assassination attempt even in late 2004, during his election campaign, when he was poisoned with a potent dioxin and suffered bad facial disfigurement as a result. After this, Ukraine and Georgia were invited to become part of NATO. This did not happen as the next president broke the discussions off to veer more towards Russia again, resulting in a Ukrainian revolution in protest. Massive protests followed, ultimately leading to the ouster of the government of President Viktor Yanukovych. Russia was royally pissed off by these revolutions and flirting with the West. When Ukraine made an association agreement with the EU, Russia tried to influence the Ukrainian government and to persuade them to suspend the signing of the agreement. They are not (yet) EU members, but really aim to be. That agreement would have ultimately resulted in a free-trade deal between the EU and Ukraine, meaning Ukraine would have moved away from its largest trading partner, Russia.
The main reason to be very cautious and careful in our western response, is most likely because everyone fears that Putin could go all mad and press the red button. He covedly threatened, by association, with a nuclear war. Nobody is certain if Putin is still fully rational by now (I think he is), but rationally speaking, nuclear response would only be on the table when there is a full scale war with another nuclear power. Right now Putin is at a conventional war with Ukraine, which gave up its nuclear arsenal to Russia in exchange for Russia's promise that it would honor Ukraine's territorial integrity... But for a nuclear powered country to declare war on Russia, that could mark the end of the modern world, and most people fear this. So for now the EU and UN and NATO are taking a cautious stance. And with Russia's nuclear force, that is perhaps the most sensible decision in the end. My grievance is with there not being a choice. As we have no powerful army, or any military power that could have detracted Putin in the first place. So we for now resort to economic and diplomatic sanctions. Hoping that it will put so much pressure on Putin, that he will come to his senses, spare Ukraine and not pursue another 'freedom operation' towards the west. Or maybe his generals will eventually have enough and overthrow Putin. Military coups are of all times, after all.
March 1, 2022
"I think all the trouble in this case really started in April, 2008, at the nato Summit in Bucharest, where afterward nato issued a statement that said Ukraine and Georgia would become part of nato. The Russians made it unequivocally clear at the time that they viewed this as an existential threat, and they drew a line in the sand. Nevertheless, what has happened with the passage of time is that we have moved forward to include Ukraine in the West to make Ukraine a Western bulwark on Russia’s border. Of course, this includes more than just nato expansion. nato expansion is the heart of the strategy, but it includes E.U. expansion as well, and it includes turning Ukraine into a pro-American liberal democracy, and, from a Russian perspective, this is an existential threat."
-You said that it’s about “turning Ukraine into a pro-American liberal democracy.” I don’t put much trust or much faith in America “turning” places into liberal democracies. What if Ukraine, the people of Ukraine, want to live in a pro-American liberal democracy?
"If Ukraine becomes a pro-American liberal democracy, and a member of nato, and a member of the E.U., the Russians will consider that categorically unacceptable. If there were no nato expansion and no E.U. expansion, and Ukraine just became a liberal democracy and was friendly with the United States and the West more generally, it could probably get away with that. You want to understand that there is a three-prong strategy at play here: E.U. expansion, nato expansion, and turning Ukraine into a pro-American liberal democracy."
-You keep saying “turning Ukraine into a liberal democracy,” and it seems like that’s an issue for the Ukrainians to decide. Nato can decide whom it admits, but we saw in 2014 that it appeared as if many Ukrainians wanted to be considered part of Europe. It would seem like almost some sort of imperialism to tell them that they can’t be a liberal democracy.
"It’s not imperialism; this is great-power politics. When you’re a country like Ukraine and you live next door to a great power like Russia, you have to pay careful attention to what the Russians think, because if you take a stick and you poke them in the eye, they’re going to retaliate. States in the Western hemisphere understand this full well with regard to the United States."
-The Monroe Doctrine, essentially.
"Of course. There’s no country in the Western hemisphere that we will allow to invite a distant, great power to bring military forces into that country."
-But that is imperialism, right? We’re essentially saying that we have some sort of say over how democratic countries run their business.
"We do have that say, and, in fact, we overthrew democratically elected leaders in the Western hemisphere during the Cold War because we were unhappy with their policies. This is the way great powers behave."
NATO’s membership rules invite conflict — and benefit Putin. When an independent state proposes entering a powerful alliance, enemy states often choose to strike
WASHINGTON POST
February 22, 2022
**When you had a single vaccine injection and went through a single natural covid infection, you will also now need a booster dose 'within four months'. - Why make it simple when you can also make it complicated?
But luckily France's leaders are themselves now planning on loosening the reigns. Around April 1st. Who knows for how long. But in any case, right in time for the presidential elections. Just a coincidence of course. Maybe Véran realizes the impasse into which France has manoeuvred itself, with a pass that is useless and a broader European tendency to in fact abolish most covid rules and restrictions. France now comes next in line to a deranged looking country like Austria, where the unvaccinated risk fines up to 15.000 euro a year, if they do not show up for their planned and entirely mandatory vaccination invitations. It won't look good in the history books, not good at all. And then to imagine this: to the question "Does repeated booster doses not risk the collapsing of the immune system?", asked by a journalist from Le Figaro to Bourla, the chief executive officer of Pfizer, he replied: "I don't think so..". We are no longer in the realms of science, but in those of beliefs and feelings. Just as we have been for some years now under the general woke regime. I wonder sometimes if articles dealing with covid should not be classified in the "Religion" section of newspapers by now. For a long time already we have been drenched in dogma and no longer purely in science... And marketing authorizations have been authorized to promote these vaccines on the market with incorrect claims, long before long-term data on efficacy and safety are available. And it is still (falsely) trumpeted on all the TV channels: "All vaccinated, all protected". [We can now say; "all contaminated"]. Like some ritual. Aren't there normally fines involved when it comes to false advertisement? "Pfizer vaccine effective for 10 weeks (!) after the booster"... We have already gone from 5 months of protection to 4, to under 3 months now. When will we be told clearly that these vaccines no longer work? When immunity will be reduced finally to lasting one week? What if we started to get out of this religion of complete and repeated vaccination and think a little? In Israel, the Jerusalem hospital, a Pr Aviv asks the question: Should RNA vaccines be stopped?
The crisis has led to extreme alarmism, not to say delusional, wishing for zero virus and refusing death. For the first time, the French had every evening a number of deaths displayed on all the media, a morbid and deeply anxiety-provoking counter and above all out of context. No previous reference (in France, there are 1,700 deaths per day), no information on people who died from Covid (the median age of death has always been 85), no perspective on the number of cured and contaminated (the mortality rate is less than 0.1%). A sort of tyranny of emotion, immense of course when it comes to death, always unacceptable. Perhaps the anxiety-inducing communication, the drastic measures and precautions and the medical hygienist discourse could be justified in the first months of the epidemic, but they became counterproductive or even dangerous thereafter. The crisis has thus plunged us into deep anguish: anguish of the other, anguish of death, anguish of microbes (which we call nosophobia). I fear a spontaneous generation of hypochondriacs. And what about the psychological trauma inflicted on children, accused in addition to being responsible for the contamination... I hope that the end of the crisis will allow a necessary appeasement in the medical world and in society."
All in all, it has been difficult for me also I suppose, on a selfish level. Because aside from all these severe rosacea restrictions I already experience for so long in my life and this need for keeping things calm, I really did feel the effects of the lockdowns and the loss of social events. Even if it was having a drink outside on a terrace with friends; it has become very difficult for me to do these past years, due to all the rules and restrictions. It makes me feel like kicking against things even more, metaphorically. Despite having 3G for nearly a year now. - By the way, some people have now started to share outcomes from the vaccine tests, which show that more people died in the test group than in the control group. But the problem here is that Pfizer and the others did such small scale testing, that 21 deaths in the test group vs 17 in the control group can just be cast aside as non-significant. They should have tested these vaccines on tens of thousands of people, hundreds of thousands, and also not only on the healthiest people out there. Now they purposely left out the people in the highest covid risk groups, for obvious reasons. Just like there are now tests done with ivermectin (dubious who subsidizes them exactly), but they specifically give it to people who are already hospitalized with covid. To purposely skew the outcome, as it is well known that ivermectin mainly helps when you give it early, as soon after infection as possible. Because it helps prevent the virus from multiplying. By the time someone is sick enough to be hospitalized, viral inhibitors are often useless. But the mainstream media are eagerly running with such headlines and lack of further detail explanations anyway.
But I had a very unpleasant situation with a friend, some weeks ago. I will try to condense the situation and will say that I have a lot of understanding and patience with mostly everyone in life, dealing with the current pandemic, but also with the onslaught of contradicting information and uncertainty. I have my own reasons for opting to not get vaccinated. It is hard to explain to people who don't have the type of absurd reactivity that I have to deal with (allergic even to dental fillings, bad allergy reactions to the perfume worn by someone in the vicinity, ton of food allergies, skin rashes from wearing even the highest quality jewelry, to name a few insanities). I have so far been OK, despite traveling regularly and not holing up in the house constantly. Not yet caught covid, fingers crossed and let's hope it stays that way. But a few weeks ago I was very close by. Or so it felt. This friend asked for a favour. Friend had spent 5 weeks abroad in a country in Central America, and upon returning, asked to be picked up and stay over one night, before traveling on. No problem. Friend is double vaccinated plus received a 3rd booster before departure to the Latin Americas. Back at home I asked if friend could perhaps do a self (antigen)test, which I had in the house. I had asked this already some days prior by mail, as a preparation question (maybe I expected some unwillingness and therefore asked it in advance). It seemed no problem. Test was... positive. "Impossible! I had my 3 shots and feel fine". Another test, also positive. Friend now got angry. It could not be! I tried to stay calm (but felt a bit anxious, to be frank). Said that these things happen but that I hoped for understanding that we would have to change the plan now. That I could serve dinner outside on the terrace or in his room. The first option was accepted disgruntledly. I knew that friend had been through a stressful 24 hours already at that point, as there had been issues with the arrval QR code at the customs. And now this. There had been hopes for warm indoors and stress-free meal sharing. But I just did not want to risk any of that. I may be grumpy in general about the vaccine mandates, but I don't think that covid is a laughing stock.
Some vaccinated people will feel entitled to question you at any time about your vaccine status and motivations, and debate you over it in a tone filled with anger and accusations. Me on the other hand.. well I write about my thoughts and irrations here, for maybe a handful of people, which is fine. It is just a way to document these times for myself and to express how I think and feel about things. I sometimes write about my rosacea, but since things are pretty repetitive with my seasonal symptom flare-ups, I just use this blog also as a diary of sorts. Covid wise, I always try to understand the people around me. Most are vaccinated and that is fine. I never accuse any of my friends or family of anything, not even of ignorance when they drag out year-old, wildly incorrect statistics again. Just because I have the interest and free time here and there to read up on these topics and do my own research also, does not mean that everybody else has this time or interest. They rely on the 8 o'clock news and their newspaper. That should do. Normally it also does do. Just, these are strange times and it pains me to see a big chunk of the media acting more like propaganda machines than like independent journalists sometimes. The agitating and rabble-rousing of some journalists, have a distinct effect on societies. Everyone is free in my view to do whatever they want. If people want 6 boosters then they should do so and I won't complain about 'vaccine shedding' or stuff like that. I won't attack them for the underwhelming levels of vaccine protection, or berate them about making the "wrong" choice when they develop vaccine side effects, at times. But unfortunately such a climate has been created, that it does happen the other way around. Even if the vaccinated comes round covid-positive and risks infecting his host. Even if the vaccinated do the absolute bare minimum of background research and just smugly bleat-repeat the lies that ivermectin is only a horse dewormer, for instance. I'm also still interested to see if Pfizer will finally share its raw vaccine study data. I'd like to know what peers think of the studies.
It is truly so that vaccinated/boostered people can move around freely with barely any test requirements, even if they have covid. That they can fly across the world, holiday, go out, drink in bars, go to restaurants infected, without a single test requirement. And then fly back again, while covid positive. It is within human nature to always point around oneself for blame, towards the others. The media/political divide and conquer strategy is working very well in many households, families and groups of friends. Some consider themselves the superiors, for following the guidelines and believing that if everyone had done the same, 'we wouldn't have been in this mess'. This mess is therefore not a mix of errors, based on underwhelming vaccines, wishy-washy illogical government policies and free range for the vaccinated. No, it is all the fault of the unvaccinated, supposedly. Even for asking for a test and for bringing the superior person in a delicate situation of conscience. But when you have over 300,000 positive covid cases each day every day now here, you quickly run out of unvaccinated numbers within society to blame. It should be common logic that when vaccinated people are proven to still get covid and pass it on, the leak lies also in the total freedom for the vaccinated. But you apparently cannot take away the carrot from the donkey, once you offered it to them.
(and a cooler version)
Horrible developments in Ukraine. So much suffering of innocent people and animals. Russia killing fleeing civilians, bombing animal shelters even, it is unbearable. With regards to our fears of a big scale war: I don't think a nuclear war is necessarily imminent, but both the Russians and Ukrainians are bombing and shooting also near nuclear power plants. Accidents can happen, especially with non-trained civilians, handling brand new weapons from the west. It looks like, from Putin 's point of view, the invasion of Ukraine is not going very well. He launched an unlawful war of aggression, public opinion is against him and he may have also underestimated the unity of the West, as well as the extent of the western sanctions which were imposed on him. In the current situation, the most favorable scenario for Putin is that of a victory after a long and bloody conflict. And even then, the situation would remain complex: the Russians would find themselves occupying a largely destroyed country, whose population would be for the most part hostile to them. And this is the best case scenario. I fear that if Putin has his back to the wall and considers his situation hopeless, he may even resort to the use of "tactical" nuclear weapons in the Ukrainian theatre to break the strategic impasse. And to terrify everyone and force Ukraine to properly negotiate. It would put the United States, which he considers at least as important as NATO, in a very delicate position. Washington would be faced with poor choices, such as getting directly involved in the conflict or washing its hands of it. (Although Joe Biden does not seem to have all his cognitive senses too sharp anymore, on most days. 'But don't you worry, uncle Joe's on the case" - Jokes).
Either way, it would be a difficult and uncomfortable decision for the United States. Putin would not take such a decision lightly. But if he feels directly threatened, it is not impossible for him to resort to it. But NATO and the United States are not directly involved in the Ukrainian conflict, which reduces the risks. But despite being morally on the right side in our own beliefs, I think western leaders and politicians have to be careful what they say and do. Statements such as senator Lindsey Graham's call to have Putin assassinated are downright dangerous. The same goes for statements such as that of the French Minister of Economy, Bruno Le Maire's declaration of economic war on Russia, explaining that the objective of the West is "to destroy the Russian economy". Or Jean-Yves Le Drian's threat of nuclear war. Macron hasn't made a mistake so far and he's keeping the dialogue going. But the weakness of his government has been a concern since the start of his five-year term. Their hasty statements are irresponsible. If Putin imagines that it is his power that is directly aimed at and threatened, he risks becoming even more dangerous. This kind of statement is very reckless I think, politically. - It is only natural for us to sympathise with the oppressed and call for vengeance. To look at this as a moral conflict. The killings of civilians is brutal and makes us all angry. But unfortunately, it is in everyone's best interest ultimately to deescalate and use a diplomatic approach. The accumulation of sanctions and the "rash statements of certain Western officials", but also of the media storm against Russia which has been unleashed since the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine... Westerners are trying to destabilise the government in place in Moscow by targeting, through an information war and very heavy sanctions, both the oligarchs and the Russian population as a whole. It gives us a sense of justice, but I fear that things could be pushed too far perhaps. The goal is not to piss off Putin. You have to give time to time. No immediate pressure will change Putin's immediate opinion. Eventually, when his soldiers or his economists suggest a path to him, he may take it. Or maybe not. But we have to create a way out.
Diplomatically speaking, in order to solve this war without it escalating into something (even) much worse for the world, Putin needs to be given at all times a path to deescalation. We must always bear in mind the risk of escalation if Putin feels cornered, and be sure to offer him a way out. Make it very clear that sanctions can be lifted in the event of a ceasefire. Or that if he gives up his operation in Ukraine, the sanctions will be automatically lifted. Private companies can trade with whomever they want, in principle. But it makes me nervous that sanctions are also targeting the Russian Central Bank, for instance. Let's hope Putin does not take it as a direct declaration of war, through the overthrow of his regime. Ideally, Ukrainians also moderate their demands. Realpolitik is the only possible outcome.. Only the balance of power can work. A negotiation can only succeed if everyone makes concessions and in this area it is not the weakest who must give in but the most intelligent. And the immediately lifting the sanctions in the event of a withdrawal from Ukraine should be accepted without hesitation.
“I don’t know what weapons might be used in World War III. But there isn’t any doubt what weapons will be used in World War IV: Stone spears.” - Einstein.
Summarising - and this is not 'victim shaming' but trying to get to the core of where this all went wrong, aside from the obvious horrors of Putin's army invading another sovereign country. But looking at the buildup of this conflict, to begin with, we should have resisted Ukraine's and NATO's 2008 pledge to integrate Ukraine into NATO.. Nicolas Sarkozy and Angela Merkel also demanded refusal of this proposition. But this did not happen and instead of protecting Ukraine, it endangered Ukraine in fact. Even Kamala Harris said right before the Ukraine invasion by Russia, that Ukraine should join NATO. No it should not! In addition, President Zelensky himself now said he is open to discuss a "neutral status" for his country. In hindsight, we should also have ensured the implementation of the Minsk agreements, which provided for free elections and constitutional reforms for the Russian-speaking regions of Donetsket and Luhansk. Finally, we should have been alert to the signals (military investment, financial precautions) that indicated that Russia was preparing for a war. And we should have done everything we could to bind Russia to Europe on an economic, cultural and academic level. We did the opposite. These observations are no excuse for Putin, but the situation is dire now. For Ukraine, of course, but also for Europe, which is punished also severely by the sanctions. But what's even worse, is that all this is driving Russia and China into each others arms, and that we are witnessing the birth of a Sino-Russian military monster. Russia is already diverting fuel, energy and vital raw materials away from Europe to other markets as we speak (such as China and the Middle East). Western Oil and energy traders are making things worse. The West meanwhile has decommissioned most of their coal and nuclear facilities, in order to reduce global warming, and have become energy dependent. They either have to deal with Russia or with Saudi's or Venezuelans for instance. Image: One million people have been forced to flee their homes in Ukraine. Among them 7 year old Violeta who made the 4 day journey from Odessa with her cat Richard. We see so many people who dump their pets for trivial reasons. This 7 year old girl can teach them a thing or two about personal responsibility and commitment. - And memes never stop (so not to be taken au sérieux).
"Conclusion: Ivermectin use was associated with decreased mortality in patients with COVID-19 compared to remdesivir. To our knowledge, this is the largest association study of patients with COVID-19, mortality and ivermectin. Further double-blinded placebo-controlled RCTs with large samples are required for definite conclusion. In the future, if more publications are published with the similar result to the current analyses, the certainty of evidence will increase."
Update: natural immunity protects around 90% against covid, as compared to 56% vaccine efficacy, says a Johnson & Johnson study (so the pharmaceutical company)
I am extremely worried about the war situation in Ukraine. Belarus is already joining Putin, as was expected. And as if things aren't bad enough now; if the two will enter a NATO country in the near future, it will probably spark total war with Europe, because Europe and NATO are expected to strike back instantly then. I hope that Putin may settle or even withdraw eventually, or that a diplomatic agreement can be made, as the western sanctions are unprecedented and Russia's economy is tanking as a result. Which must be extremely difficult for Russian civilians. There seems very little understanding however right now, between the West and Putin. Here in the west, media and politicians assume that Putin has surrounding himself with yes-nodders and is in some sort of echo chamber of his own. Some say he has a mystery illness, cancer even (which is unverified), and that would make him willing to risk so much to overtake Ukraine. In any case, he cannot be a rational, sane leader. The shootings of civilians in Ukraine and bombings of cities and civilians targets is making my heart bleed. It's all so horrible and brutal. I am also worried about Putin threatening with nuclear war, or either his or the Ukrainian army severely damaging one of the nuclear reactors in the country.. Let's hope he purely threatens with nuclear destruction to remind NATO to stay the hell out of this conflict. So far it is working, if you overlook the massive economic sanctions and full force cancel-culture that Russia has been hit with. A new phenomenon in wars. Over here there is outrage. Constant news on the media channels, anti-Russia, pro-Ukraine. There is a sudden cohesive feeling, countries in the EU are starting to realise that we have indeed not invested enough in our own armies (or even in NATO). Germany announced the other day that its government will invest 100 billion (!) euro's in its army henceforth. Hopefully we will create our own European Army, and remove ourselves from the American influence and warmongering. But that is of no use right now. That is for the future.
What makes matters more muddy, is the entire oil and gas situation. Most of Europe still relies on Russian energy and continues to buy it from Putin. Overall, Russia provides 40% of Europe's natural gas and 50% of Germany's oil I read. Green energy (wind, solar etc) is great in theory, but the energy it nowadays provides comes not even close to being sufficient for a country like Germany, for instance. We impose economic sanctions on Russia at the moment, but continue to buy their oil and gas. It was revealed today that the West is still paying Russia more than $1billion-a-day for oil and gas that Putin can use to subsidise his $15billion-a-day invasion of Ukraine. So this seems pretty counterproductive. Energy reforms in the west of course come too late now. In Europe we have been preoccupied with climate change, reaching greenhouse goals and dismantling all polluting ways of getting our energy. That is great, but right now we have a problem, relying on a newfound enemy for our daily energy, needed to keep our own industries going (and subsidising the Russia war, indirectly). This is such a complex issue and despite all the good intentions of someone like Greta Thunberg for instance, I can't help feeling frustrated at times about the simplistic thinking that has seeped through into the public debate. I never heard her come up with realistic short-term solutions, which respect and understand the incredibly complex politics in the world, forged through historic conflict, geopolitics, economics, strategic war balance and the rest of it. Just all 'blah blah blah' in the eyes of the youngest generation, with the attention span of ... your usual tiktok user. So the media blew it up and we have all wanted to do our bit and go green; put a stop to nuclear power plants, invest in solar and wind energy. Of course that is not enough right now, combined with our modern, energy-guzzling lifestyle. So the west also invested massively in Russian oil and gas. Did Greta ever consider or advised us about what could happen when the west all moved to green energy like that, depending on a thug state like Russia to up it up? Did she ever take into account what weakness and dependence the West has shown? And how bad wars of this scale are for the environment, in a world of candyfloss and unicorns? Not saying that meeting climate goals isn't very important, it is incredibly important. But other things are also important, such as protecting our union, our countries, our western freedoms; defending the freedoms of others and trying to prevent a nuclear war that will destroy everything... And this is all intertwined currently. I think that deep down, we know it. And that's partly why there had been so much shock, horror and absolute bewilderment here about what is happening now. This may very well be another turning point in our western history. Like 9/11 was.
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