dystopian writes:
Misdirection; you claimed that the vote to oust him was not legal. That is wrong, as my post demonstrates.
The BBC report also says the protestors entered the Parliament building.
No, it doesn't. Do you understand the difference between 'Presidential offices and residences' and 'parliament'? Because the article only mentions protestors being allowed into the former, not the latter.
They do not mention that the protestors were armed. Guns can decide a vote very quickly.
Of course they wouldn't mention that; because there were no protestors inside parliament.
I have heard otherwise but it is a minor point.
No it isn't. If you've heard otherwise, you've heard wrong. Fallen victim to pro-russian propaganda, most likely; pushing this idea that there was no quorum because a 3 fourths majority was required to impeach him; forgetting that he was not actually impeached but rather a resolution was adapted removing him from office on account of the fact he was no longer able to carry out his duties: and only 226 votes are required to carry a motion. This is pretty relevant point that goes to show the questionable validity of anything you may have "heard".
Yes, you've just admitted that the removal was unconstitutional since parliament doesn't have such authority.
The BBC post that YOU just posted says that the protestors entered the Parliament building.
Again, no it doesn't.
But they even need to do that? If they're outside the building with their guns, the parliament is still acting under duress.
Is the US senate acting under duress because there's armed police outside? Don't be absurd. There are no reports of armed protestors outside parliament threathening those inside. There certainly weren't any armed soldiers locking the politicians inside until they voted a certain way, as is what happened in Crimea.
So armed men posted at Crimean voting booths influence the decisions of voters casting a secret ballot, but they do not influence the decisions of legislators voting in public. You completely contradict yourself. Police outside the US Senate do not influence the Senators because the Senate controls the police.
There were plenty of reports of armed protestors in the Maidan which is where the government buildings were. Why did Yanukovich flee for his life if there were not threats? In fact, those armed thugs remained on the maidan for quite a while after the incident, and some of them may still be there.
I'm not surprised that you haven't read that in the msm however.
Well, I've already addressed the armed protestors and parliament. Your own source says they were there, although it doesn't say they were armed. But it hardly matters.
Except that it *doesn't* say that, and it *does* matter.
I never endorsed the Crimean elections. I never said that process was OK.
Oh please. Your endorsement may not be explicit, but it is absolutely implicit in everything you've written on the topic.
What I said is that, given the ultra nationalist coup in Kiev
This of course, is part of why your endorsement for the Crimean vote is implicit; language like this. It was *not* an ultranationalist coup; since the ultranationalists represented only a minority of both the protestors and the new government that was formed. And of course, it also wasn't even a coup, since contrary to pro-russian claims, the vote was perfectly legal and democratic. By insisting on referring to it as an ultranationalist coup, your bias is laid bare for all to see.
By your own admission, the vote to oust Yanukovich was extra-constitutional.
How often do I have to point out that the neo-Nazis and ultra-nationalists, although a minority of the protestors, were a majority of the ARMED protestors and that makes all the difference.
and the fact that 60% of the Crimean population was Russian speaking, it is likely that such a referendum would have passed in a fair and proper election.
Bullshit. You can not infer that because X % of a region speaks Russian, that they would therefore all have voted pro-russian in a fair election. Especially not when prior to Russian troops occupying Crimea, polls showed the opposite. Less than third of Crimeans wanted to join Russia in 2013; there is no way the numbers would spike that high without propaganda and foul play involved. And if it was so likely that they'd vote to join Russia, then why the obvious and blatant tampering with the process and results?
I have already said, here or on other posts, that the Crimeans favored continued association with Ukraine even though they elected a President who favored it. But that BEFORE the coup in Kiev. Why wouldn't Russian speaking people want to secede from their government when it had been violently taken over by people who hate Russians?
I can neither endorse nor reject the referendum that took place because I have very little information about it.
Of course.
You overlook the fact that it is rather pointless to be spending that kind of money (and $ 5 billion is not a pittance), to develop democratic institutions in a country that is already a functioning democracy. If it was to go to "stabilizing" the country then it was obviously wasted.
Oh my god, you're serious. Do you actually believe that Ukraine, immediately following its independence in 1991 was a functioning democracy? Or even since then? You DO know that when Yanukovych was first voted president in 2004 he did so through massive electoral fraud, inciting mass protests, and ultimately leading to the supreme court having to invalidate the results, right? You DO know that when years later, he became president; one of the first things he did was to start undoing the democratic reforms that limited the power of the presidency, and imprisoning his political enemies, right? How on earth could you call that a functioning democracy?
The "Orange Revolution" was a series of protests aimed at keep Yanukovich from taking power. Color revolutions are a trade mark of the National Endowment for Democracy which means it was a CIA operation. No one denies that Yanukovich was corrupt as were his predecessors. But fighting corruption and promoting democracy are not the same thing. Ukraine probably wasn't as corrupt as the US government is, but that's another thing you won't learn from the mainstream media.
I am not pro-Russian. I simply look at the evidence.
Selectively.
Are you kidding? If I'm looking at the evidence selectively, I'm at least the one doing the selecting. You are buying the claims of the US government (who have proven to be liars time and time again) and their lapdog media.
I'm am selecting out the most pertinent evidence such as the fact that the most extreme elements were also the ones with the guns.
We've imposed several rounds of sanctions on Putin. For what? He hasn't done anything.
Are you fucking kidding me? He *annexed* an area the size of Belgium; a highly illegal act in violation of all international law; and something that hasn't happened in Europe since WW2. It is completely and utterly unacceptable, and something that must carry consequences. And this of course is ignoring the shit he did in Georgia. Putin has done plenty wrong; things that demand an international response. If you can't or won't see this, then you're just blindly pro-russian regardless of what you say.
Given the US sponsored coup in Kiev, I'm surprised that Putin didn't do a whole lot more. He invaded Georgia AFTER the Georgians invaded South Ossetia and killed Russian peace-keepers there. What you expect him to do if you killed his troops. He had Georgia. He was in Tbilisi, but he didn't stay there. He didn't even set up a puppet government. The current Georgian regime is anti-Russian. What kind of "imperialism" is that. That's why I say that this canard of Russian imperialism is laughably stupid. But people believe it because they are lied to my the mainstream press.
As for Crimea, the parliament voted for annexation and people ratified it in a referendum. I cannot attest to the fairness of that vote. According to you armed men looking over your shoulder would not influence the voter. But neither you nor I know very much about what took place. But if you persist in this, I would ask you to source your claims regarding the Crimean elections.
As I have noted one would hardly expect a negative vote given the events in Kiev given the response in places like Donetsk and Luhansk which, being oblasts, rather than autonomous republics have had to take arms against the Kiev regime.
However, given the events in the maidan, I think Putin would have been thoroughly justified in invading Ukraine, throwing out the neo-Nazis and restoring the legitimate government of Ukraine to power. He could have argued that he is merely restoring the legitimate government of Ukraine while protecting the Russian speaking people and enforcing the compromise agreement which (unarmed) protestors had reached with the Yanukovich government. We have intervened with far fewer pretexts.
I would argue that for reasons of Russia's national security he was entitled to do much much more. We claim we have to bomb some far-off country like Libya or Syria in our "national interest," but insist that Putin is an imperialist if he intervenes, even slightly, on serious developments on his own border. The hypocrisy of all this is really revolting.
Bullshit. Countries do NOT have the right to invade their neighbors without cassus belli (no such cassus belli existed); much less annex whole regions from them. At no point was Russia's national security at actual risk. You can say what you want about US bombing campaigns; but two wrongs don't make a right. And at least the US doesn't annex territory like a *true* imperial bully.
It certainly does make for a very hypocritical foreign policy to say that we can intervene at will, but others must face "serious consequences" for doing so. Russian foreign policy drew the line at the breakup of the Soviet Union when Russia asserted its right to intervene in former Soviet Republics if they threatened Russian speaking peoples.
But when is the last time you attacked the US for its interventions which you seem to suggest were unjustified, and where does the US get it's legal or moral authority to "punish" the Russians with sanctions for not doing what we desire?
I've posted the source here in previous discussions. If you haven't heard of the controversy over her "fuck the EU" comment, then you haven't given the attention to this issue that you are claiming. This isn't an issue I should have to source. You should know this. It's common knowledge.
Yes, the 'fuck the EU' comment 'scandal' is common knowledge. Just as it's common knowledge that your interpretation of said comment has been thoroughly debunked in the same threads you and other pro-russians posted it in.
The critics misrepresented the context in which Nuland was speaking. In fact, I don't think they even understood what the conversation was about.
If you're not a conspiracy theorist, you're not studying foreign affairs.
Shall we blame the illuminati next?
However, I do not appreciate having to respond to contentless posts like this one. Please avoid them in the future.
Why am I not surprised that you try to dismiss it as 'contentless'? I, at least, do not dismiss your posts as contentless. Clearly they have content. Nonsensical content, sure, but content nonetheless.
You throw in enough insults as it is. I generally accept that insults are an indication of a lack of content, but I don't like having to deal with a post that contains nothing else.
Oh believe me, if I was actually insulting you, I wouldn't be this nice about it.
It isn't up to you to decide what is offensive to other people. They decide that. If you persist in the insults I will put you on my ignore list.
Incidentally, I generally accept that people who generally accept that insults are an indication of a lack of content, only state that they do so in order to convince themselves that because they feel offended they don't have to consider the actual points abd arguments that violate their personal reality.
There were no points. I did not complain about your insults until you entered a post that was nothing but insults.
Because you know, insults actually have no relation whatsoever to the truth or validity of what someone is saying. "1 + 1 = 2" is still true even if you word it as "1 + 1 = 2, you motherfucking dick."
We've discussed this enough. This whole post is mostly repetition of preceding posts. I won't respond to a continuation of this discussion. If you are willing to discuss the actual topic of this thread, which concerns the current situation in Ukraine I would be willing to respond.