ok what the fuck is happening in ukraine

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Flightradar shows a commercial flight taking off from Chisinau to Milan as scheduled so hopefully not

anvil, Thursday, 24 February 2022 05:07 (four years ago)

Either Russian tanks entering through Belarus or actual Belarusian military is joining in?!

FRAUDULENT STEAKS (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Thursday, 24 February 2022 05:37 (four years ago)

Fox News (Ingram, Greenwald, etc. on the air) on the side of Russia is something else.

deep luminous trombone (Eazy), Thursday, 24 February 2022 05:41 (four years ago)

Yeah I’m kind of freaked out by that

frogbs, Thursday, 24 February 2022 05:43 (four years ago)

Flight landing in Chisinau from Iasi so the Moldova stuff looks not to be true

anvil, Thursday, 24 February 2022 05:53 (four years ago)

Is fox all-in pro Russia now, or just some of the lunatics? Any chance this wakes some Americans up to what unhinged trash the network is?!

FRAUDULENT STEAKS (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Thursday, 24 February 2022 05:57 (four years ago)

Well, the big guy called in:

Trump is angrily denouncing a President right now on Fox News, and it’s not Putin.

— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) February 24, 2022

deep luminous trombone (Eazy), Thursday, 24 February 2022 06:01 (four years ago)

And this is Greenwald tonight. But you're right: it'll be important whether the Fox & Friends and other anchor follow suit, or tow the same line with this.

Glenn Greenwald on Fox News just now blames the “extremely unhinged conspiracy theory about Russia taking over American institutions” for spoiling US-Russia relations & ruining Trump’s opportunity to work with Putin. He thinks that’s to blame for Russia invading Ukraine. Amazing. pic.twitter.com/AwtG7mCJ8I

— Caroline Orr Bueno, Ph.D (@RVAwonk) February 24, 2022

deep luminous trombone (Eazy), Thursday, 24 February 2022 06:04 (four years ago)

someone launch a full-scale attack on the fucker's laptop, please

sorry Mario, but our princess is in another butthole (Neanderthal), Thursday, 24 February 2022 06:32 (four years ago)

what is cnn playing

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Thursday, 24 February 2022 07:45 (four years ago)

A couple of good people to follow to get a sense of what’s happening:

@KofmanMichael - military analyst

@kgorchinskaya - Ukrainian journalist with Forbes

@shaunwalker7 - Guardian

@polinaivanovva - FT

Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Thursday, 24 February 2022 07:50 (four years ago)

ty

mookieproof, Thursday, 24 February 2022 08:25 (four years ago)

As I sit here in a nation bordering Ukraine I'm pretty darn thankful that (1) I live in a NATO country and (2) Trump is not US president right now. Scary shit.

Sam Weller, Thursday, 24 February 2022 08:28 (four years ago)

That doesn’t just mean allowing people across the border. It means access to decent accommodation, swift asylum procedures and work permits; humanitarian and financial assistance. The kind of support we should have in place for everyone who needs it. https://t.co/ghrRzJBBEA

— Daniel Trilling (@trillingual) February 24, 2022

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 24 February 2022 08:49 (four years ago)

Something that Western governments should do.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 24 February 2022 08:50 (four years ago)

thanks SV.

Reading this thread caused me to review my indexing on crisis from last year

Throughout this crisis, one key analytical divide (of several) has been between those analysts who focus on Russian domestic politics on the one hand, and military analysts on the other. I'm obviously in the former camp.

— Sam Greene (@samagreene) February 24, 2022

this is somewhat self-indulgent, given eg Sam Weller's post the immediate local crisis, as well as the wider global impact, but it is also, prompted by SV's post, a way of auditing how i get information and to what extent it should have attention paid to it - on ongoing thing about the importance of epistemic health in the digital age.

at christmas I had a lot of catching up to do generally as was woefully uninformed. the military analysis from sites like War on the Rocks was pretty powerful, i had it mentally high probability. this Tooze Chartbook in January was particularly useful, and the video there was fairly unequivocal (warning very 'military industrial analyst' vibe). more recently some analysis, like the lack of apparent media preparation, and the looooong build-up + difficulty of maintaining forces in place, made me reduce my percentages. In retrospect that was also because of some personal uncertainty about the validity of the military analysis - was this a case of deformation professionelle? james meek and paul rogers (a v good, all too rare left poltics military analyst), were being more cautious. before it sort of levelled out at a 60% level, with obviously putin speeches and more rapid additional mobilisation over the last week or so bringing it to a point of inevitability.

one thing i saw a lot of on twitter and elsewhere was people indexing on the likelihood on the basis of political and media rhetoric coming out the UK and US, heavily discounting warmongering speeches as discounting the likelihood of war itself. this seemed wild, nationalistically self-important, deny the importance of events to ukrainians and russians (rather than say, what does x person in US and UK think about) and to make putin's agency somehow a factor of parliamentary speeches and media noise.

Fizzles, Thursday, 24 February 2022 09:20 (four years ago)

Shit.

Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 24 February 2022 09:37 (four years ago)

btw the linked video in my post is one of SV’s people to follow - Michael Kofman.

obviously all after the fact now but it was the single most useful thing i watched at the beginning of the year.

Fizzles, Thursday, 24 February 2022 09:39 (four years ago)

Kofman’s the best military analyst I’ve seen on the Russian armed forces and he has said this has been the likely outcome from the start.

I think there’s a danger in retrospectively agreeing that any turn of events was inevitable, though. The Russian Foreign Ministry was putting out troll posts about the US failing to provoke a war less than a week ago. I’m not sure how many of the inner circle knew we were going to be where we are today, let alone external commentators.

My view is that Russia probably expected Zelenskiy to cave to the pressure and go back to implementing Minsk II and the initial noise about moving troops back from the front was a response to some of the signs in that direction. When Zelenskiy said that was untenable, and couldn’t be squared with the idea that Ukraine was a sovereign state, Putin shifted to overt aggression.

Scampo di tutti i Scampi (ShariVari), Thursday, 24 February 2022 09:41 (four years ago)

"The Russian Foreign Ministry was putting out troll posts about the US failing to provoke a war less than a week ago."

The role of trolling/memes etc. in the build-up of this is something to look at.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 24 February 2022 09:45 (four years ago)

.....sez himself

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Thursday, 24 February 2022 09:47 (four years ago)

fwiw one of my work colleagues is Russian, and lived in the US for awhile, and is a die-hard The Daily listener, and said she has found the US media coverage of this bewildering, partic in the NY Times. She says it amounted to 'escalation', said it made her sick to her stomach, had to stop listening to The Daily, says that Putin probably felt like if he didn't do anything now after all of this he'd look weak. Obviously this is one person's non-expert view but thought it worth sharing. She never thought Putin would go beyond the disputed territories, if that. And she couldn't believe the hypocrisy of American media - "as if the US never invaded other countries!"

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 24 February 2022 10:38 (four years ago)

lol

imago, Thursday, 24 February 2022 10:39 (four years ago)

I was like listen it's an American tradition maybe you wouldn't understand

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 24 February 2022 10:41 (four years ago)



I think there’s a danger in retrospectively agreeing that any turn of events was inevitable, though. The Russian Foreign Ministry was putting out troll posts about the US failing to provoke a war less than a week ago. I’m not sure how many of the inner circle knew we were going to be where we are today, let alone external commentators.



totally agree with this. probabilities change all the time for real reasons and responses as well as information availability. i think kofman himself said that kremlin watchers, no matter how good their contacts, couldn’t really get close enough to putin’s thinking.

Fizzles, Thursday, 24 February 2022 10:42 (four years ago)

one thing i saw a lot of on twitter and elsewhere was people indexing on the likelihood on the basis of political and media rhetoric coming out the UK and US, heavily discounting warmongering speeches as discounting the likelihood of war itself. this seemed wild, nationalistically self-important, deny the importance of events to ukrainians and russians (rather than say, what does x person in US and UK think about) and to make putin's agency somehow a factor of parliamentary speeches and media noise.

Mr. Fizzles putting it a bit more eloquently than some of us have managed.

Blu Ray Davies (Tom D.), Thursday, 24 February 2022 10:43 (four years ago)

Sabre rattling

― mardheamac (gyac), Wednesday, February 16, 2022 1:06 PM (one week ago) bookmarkflaglink

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 11:07 (four years ago)

As the Russian annexation of Ukraine escalates, reminder that the UK has been deploying troops along Poland's border with both Ukraine and Belarus to stop refugees entering the EU. This will only intensify as the military conflict does. https://t.co/aZQtNjZxFO

— libcom.org (@libcomorg) February 24, 2022

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 24 February 2022 11:15 (four years ago)

Sabre rattling

― mardheamac (gyac), Wednesday, February 16, 2022 1:06 PM (one week ago) bookmarkflaglink


mardheamac (gyac)
Posted: 17 February 2022 at 11:30:13
The unfortunate nature of china’s role in the world means they’re never going to get held to account ito what they’ve been doing in Tibet/Xinjiang, Russia to a lesser extent has a position of power because of its role shipping gas to Europe and its location. It takes a lot for a war to kick off because of these realities I guess, so Putin et al can really act as they like with impunity because what’s going to happen to them? And does Western Europe even care beyond keeping the gas on? And if there’s no danger of military pushback then Russia doesn’t have to do anything besides move some troops around and make some verbal threats, so yeah, that’s really my thinking on “sabre rattling”, that and the only people really going hard for war are the only people who always are, ie Atlantic Council shitheads and dopes like AA.

^ like obviously they did choose to? My point was that they didn’t have to.

Calz otm re you now and ever.

mardheamac (gyac), Thursday, 24 February 2022 11:20 (four years ago)

The only people really going hard for war are the only people who always are, ie Atlantic Council shitheads and dopes like AA.

Brillant stuff

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 11:35 (four years ago)

It’s good that this thread has reoriented to what really matters: settling scores on ilx.

mardheamac (gyac), Thursday, 24 February 2022 11:37 (four years ago)

I don’t think you understand the disputed regions, gyac.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 11:47 (four years ago)

none of this is about being right or wrong is it tho - it’s about the probability of outcomes changing over time. as SV has said it was surely likely thinking was contingent and uncertain in such a risky war for Russia. Seeing how the build up of pressure on the borders affected the international response - sabre rattling if you like - may well have been part of the process.

otoh given previous statements maybe this was a long term intent. we don’t know.

it’s possible that highly likely outcomes don’t transpire and vice versa: gotchas don’t really make any sense.

Fizzles, Thursday, 24 February 2022 11:56 (four years ago)

aka in hindsight it's easy to say things were inevitable. we have already had big essays explaining why brexit had to have unfolded the way it did, which is plainly bonkers as it could have gone a million different ways at a million different moments.

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 24 February 2022 12:04 (four years ago)

Agreed Tracer, but maybe don’t act like you know it all and demean other people’s worries and concerns.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 12:14 (four years ago)

SV and Fizzles, the solid sources are greatly appreciated.

@ChristopherJM looks like another fairly good one.

recovering internet addict/shitposter (viborg), Thursday, 24 February 2022 12:22 (four years ago)

I don’t think you understand the disputed regions, gyac.

― Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 bookmarkflaglink

The disputed regions understander has logged on.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 24 February 2022 12:46 (four years ago)

Yeah thank god for Fizzles’ input.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 12:52 (four years ago)

Less of you would be even better still.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 24 February 2022 12:54 (four years ago)

oh good VHS is here

OG Bob Sacamano (will), Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:17 (four years ago)

i have a Ukrainian friend in the US who is very depressed and cynical about all of this. she says this has been planned for years, the NY Times was just saying what was obvious to everyone, she says Putin is immune to sanctions, they don't work, and he will take all of Ukraine, and Belarus and Moldova.

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:26 (four years ago)

Putin Very Bad but honestly can’t imagine a world where his hard-on for Ukraine portends anything worse for the avg citizen there than the US’

I see this is a team effort.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:27 (four years ago)

My daughter texted from school yesterday to ask if I thought this was going to start WWIII and I said "no." But honestly, these days? "Maybe." It's already somewhat akin to the start of WWII, that's for sure.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:34 (four years ago)

aka in hindsight it's easy to say things were inevitable. we have already had big essays explaining why brexit had to have unfolded the way it did, which is plainly bonkers as it could have gone a million different ways at a million different moments.


yes exactly this! i’ve felt quite frustrated about this from covid to the capitol riots. post event certainty supporting pre-event views does not validate pre-event views. though where events end up turning out differently from what you thought was likely, it’s v good to recognise look at information sources and your own biases obv.

it’s why i’m trying to put my thinking down on metaculus more and remember to update it regularly.

this from a locked account is relevant:

https://i.imgur.com/zz4ZpxM.jpg

anyway, this is to a certain extent naval gazing and what’s happening on the ground far more important, which is why good sources are so vital, especially in the very information poor uk media.

Fizzles, Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:36 (four years ago)

It’s a lot to take during a pandemic. Thinking of all the parents who have to explain this situation to their children.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:36 (four years ago)

er not that sort of naval. navel.

Fizzles, Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:37 (four years ago)

_I see this is a team effort.


i’m a certified idiot sure but it’s hard to say US interests have done much good for former USSR countries since 1991. also wonder if a guy like Putin would be in power now if Russia hadn’t been treated like a hotel mattress by the west during the 90s.

anyway, this must be how the rest of the world felt when our leaders (including the last two Democratic presidential candidates) decided to invade Iraq. yeah that’s right i whatsboutismed, die mad about it

OG Bob Sacamano (will), Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:46 (four years ago)

not to be typically myopically american about it but i feel kinda the same today as i did then!

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:50 (four years ago)

Most people will, myself included, I do not believe it is whataboutism, it’s a similar feeling of seeing something historically atrocious happening.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 24 February 2022 13:57 (four years ago)


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