As a Finn I say this is fine. Every military resource that is tied down and not raping and destroying Ukraine is net positive.

  • no banana@lemmy.world
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    Oh you’re gonna move your last three tanks there? Good luck with that venture lmao

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      They can make a big show of parking the T14s and Su-57s there knowing they won’t have to be put to use and no one will find out how shit they are.

  • dangblingus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Forget article 5, if Russia thinks that Ukrainians are tough mothers, they (literally) won’t know what hit them in Finland.

    Thick, dense forests with millions of trees. Moutainous regions. Snow forever. Lots of places a sniper pair could hide.

  • Lord Wiggle@lemmy.world
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    Finland is NATO. He’ll NEVER invade Finland. Have fun dividing up your oh so great, properly trained and well equipped army haha! Not like he’ll need the troops in Ukraine, that war is going as smooth AF.

    • ghen@sh.itjust.works
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      I feel like he’s doing this just to threaten the troops on the front line with somewhere colder

      • Lord Wiggle@lemmy.world
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        Loads of forest up north. I’d prefer a camp fire over gunfire. Just make sure to bring your own axe.

        • etuomaala@sopuli.xyz
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          Finns camp in such conditions voluntarily. Russians probably do too, lol. In fact, many Russians in that particular area of Russia are a lot more like Finns than they are like Russians. In fact, they are being repressed, and their language and culture is being systematically erased. If we are playing by Russian rules, this means Finland just has to step in, to uphold the human rights of the Finnic peoples living in this area.

          • Lord Wiggle@lemmy.world
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            I get your point. However, within a military it’s not like you’re stationed where you are originally from. So, most military left right now are the minorities from the east, or at least, they are drafted and sent to the front an mass. Except maybe for the officers not going to the front. But then again, they aren’t stationed where they are from, but where the regime requires them to be. I bet the minorities living in Russia close to Finland won’t feel much support for the regime, unless they too are too much brainwashed by the propaganda. But in general, the minorities often prefer to separate from Russia completely.

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            Karelia is the region of Russia close to Finland. And these people are technically Karelians (and I’m ethnically part Karelian as my father is Karelian). Karelian historically forcefully were assimilated either into what is Finland or Russian Federation today. Karelian culture is near extinct.

  • Skkorm@lemmy.world
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    Have fun with that. This isn’t WW2. The Finnish military is far from large, but they are a specialized group with with a lot of national pride, and Russia currently has a hesitant conscript force with no emotional tie to the cause.

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      Finland was first created some time during the Cold War between Russia and the West.

      Japan-Soviet relations had always been shaky at best, but also incredibly secretive. Even as early as 1925 Japan and the Soviet Union had secret deals with each other regarding fishing rights between the two countries, with the Soviet Union giving up much of it’s fishing rights to Japan with seemingly no explanation as to why.

      These secretive treaties and alliances continued right up until just before the fall of the Soviet Union, Gorbachev made trips to Japan months before the fall of the Soviet Union stating the entire time how the relations between them were improving, even when Soviet relations with the rest of the world were worsening.

      In fact the entire past 100 years of Japanese-Russian relations bring up many unanswered questioned.

      Why at the height of WW2, were the battles between these two countries minimal despite being on opposing sides?

      Why did Japan sign a peace treaty with Russia in 1941, just months before their allies, Germany, went to war with Russia?

      Why were relations between Japan and Russia always good throughout the Cold War, despite the major geopolitical differences between the countries, and close geographical positions that you think would cause tensions?

      The answer is simple, they shared a common secret. A common asset that worked in both of their favours. And that asset was Finland.

      It’s unclear when Finland was first thought up, some say it was during the Cold War, and others say it was as far back as the 1920’s, but the necessity of Finland is quite simple.

      Japan can fish in the region of ocean between Sweden and Russia without worry for environmental repercussions, after all, nobody’s going to expect fishing regulations to be broken in a place where everyone thinks there’s a landmass will they? And in return Russia get a percentage of the fish to distribute amongst their populace.

      It’s a simple case of fishing the Finnish Sea, transporting it across Russia, (that was the real reason for the construction of the Trans-Siberian railway by the way), and then shipping it from the Eastern Russian coast to Japan under the disguise of ‘Nokia’ products.

      This is why Nokia is the largest ‘Finnish’ company, and it is also why Japan is the largest importer of Nokia products, despite the fact that very few people own Nokia phones in the country.

      There are clearly some unanswered questions to this conspiracy that I’ll try and address below.

      1- What about Finnish people? Are they all in on the conspiracy?

      A. No. People from Finland genuinely believe they’re from Finland. In reality they are from small towns on either the Eastern part of Sweden, the Western part of Russia, or the Northern part of Estonia.

      2- What about all of Finland’s other exports other than Nokia?

      A. Finland’s three biggest, and three most well known areas of industry are Oil, Tech, and Software. The oil is gathered in offshore platforms where the rest of us believe the landmass of Finland is, (again the Japanese get to avoid rigging regulations in this respect), the Tech companies have already been explained above with the Nokia post, and Software companies can easily redirect their IP Address through the Finnish sea. As for other Finnish exports, well, claiming Santa comes from your country isn’t a viable way to get people to believe in it.

      3- What about Helsinki? That is an enormous city on the world stage.

      A. Helsinki is located in Eastern Sweden. It’s not like the people flying there would notice.

      4- What about everywhere else in Finland? There’s a lot to it and it couldn’t all be made up.

      A. 99% of Finland is forest. A lot of it doesn’t need to be accounted for when addressing Finnish geography.

      5- Why do other countries go along with it?

      A. At first it was a sign of goodwill between Western Countries and the Soviet Union. A bargaining chip that could be played. But Finland has since evolved to something much more. An idealistic placeholder for what countries should aspire to. No real country could so consistently place first in Education, Healthcare, Gender Equality, Literacy Rates, National Stability, The least corrupt government in the world, Freedom of the press. It’s a concept for countries and people to aspire to. But that’s where the problems about Finland’s existence is disputed. no country in the world can possibly be that good.

      6- Why the name Finland?

      A. The country was originally made for fishing. What do fish have? Fins. Thus Finland.

      7- What about the Finnish language?

      A. Look up the similarities between Japanese and Finnish. It may surprise you how similar they are. Which is weird considering the vast distances between them.

      8- I’m Finnish and your attack on my people and culture is insulting.

      A. I’m not insulting Finnish people or culture. I don’t even deny that there is Finnish culture. When you have a collective of a few million people identifying as Finnish then of course a culture will be built around it. I’m simply saying that that the landmass of Finland isn’t actually there. It doesn’t mean there can’t be a culture or identity of being Finnish however.

      9- This is an enormous conspiracy to keep secret, how could nobody else of realized it?

      A. Other people have realized it. But imagine the ridiculousness of the statement ‘I don’t believe Finland exists’. Even if we did have undeniable proof of something put in front of us we would still hold the opinion that most of our friends, family, and acquaintances hold to not disrupt social convention. It’s part of the human condition.

      10- What about GPS and Satellite Images?

      A. It’s manipulated and forged. In the parts of Estonia, Sweden, and Russia that are allocated as ‘Finnish zones’ the GPS locations are changed to match that of Finland. Satellite images are forged. This is how that part of the world really looks.

    • BleatingZombie@lemmy.world
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      I could be wrong, but I think I also heard that Finland has (one of?) the largest artillery forces and really tough land to traverse on the border of Russia

  • suoko@feddit.it
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    First target: grain exporters Second target: phone exporters Third target: tourism exporters? Wood exporters? Weapon exporters? Ouch!

  • robocall@lemmy.world
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    There’s too much mud and rain in Ukraine right now, so they need an excuse to pull back

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      Russia will absolutely not invade Finland, even if it weren’t part of NATO and the EU.

        • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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          That’s what I thought about the threats to invade Ukraine. It was such a stupid idea that surely someone as intelligent as Putin wouldn’t do it. But then he did. We can no longer assume he’ll act rationally.

          That doesn’t mean he is going to invade, but it does mean we need to take his threat seriously.

      • RBG@discuss.tchncs.de
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        Which is great news for the Russian soldiers who are going to be stationed there. Not going to the meat grinder instead.

      • lurch (he/him)@sh.itjust.works
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        You’re probably right, but that was exactly what people were commenting while russian troops were officially still just doing an exercise near the Ukrainian border. Putin is a madman and capable of unexpected crazy behaviour

        • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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          I suppose, but attacking NATO would be a whole other level of crazy. The biggest winner there would be Ukraine.

        • TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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          Well no actually. US intelligence was basically telling the entire world that the invasion was 100 percent going to happen. How do you not remember that?

        • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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          Only once that I know of, and that was arguably a stalemate even though the USSR took part of Karelia. The Finns also learned their lesson there, and today (enormous network of bunkers, largest artillery force in Europe, F-35s on order, military reserve is 20% of the population) they are ready.

          Plus, of course, they are EU members (which has a mutual defense clause) and NATO (whose Article 5 is well-known)

      • Zevlen@lemm.ee
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        War , death, poverty, murder, disease and rape are never a joke my friendly friend

  • Quacksalber@sh.itjust.works
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    >Be Putin
    >Announce NATO expansion is no threat
    >Pull most troops from the Finnish border, because holy fuck, Ukraine has turned the entire army you had at the start into sunflower fertalizer
    >Have all the units you pulled from the Finnish border incur astronomical losses, because you want to present any win at the next election
    >Declare Finland a threat again
    >Move the broken units back up to the border
    >Profit

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      I don’t think they even bother with elections. Russia is dictatorship not a democracy

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        His greatest political opponent just “went missing” (from the prison he was being held in) and “nobody knows where he is now.” Russians have been watching their population get ground into meat by what he originally called “a military exercise” that’s been going on over six times the time estimate that he set, and he’s actively making it so nobody can leave Russia without smuggling themselves out.

        He wouldn’t still hold office if he was playing fairly, so yes, he is that weak domestically. Get fucked, Vladolf Putler.

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          Don’t forget the oligarchs can no longer live the lives they did. Obviously they are complicit with the war but that doesn’t change the fact that there are those that would turn against him if the right opportunity presented itself

        • dlok@lemmy.world
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          Hace the days of it being illegal to call it anything but a special military operation in Russia ended?

  • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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    Hey question for the arm-chair generals: if some group started operations on the Russian troops would it escalate or would both nations just treat it like random terrorism?

    • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      It really depends. If the group is a bunch of radical Islamic terrorists for instance, who have no diplomatic ties? It’ll probably be considered terrorism by a third party. If it was the Wagner Group though, who is known to be under Putin’s control, it would definitely be an escalation.

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      Question for the questioner:

      if some group started operations on the Russian troops

      What group are you talking about?

      Hint: No one in NATO wants anything in Russia.

      • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        I don’t know. Some terrorist group goes to Finland, creeps over the border, and burns down something Russian or the opposite. Border incidents do happen. I am curious how it would be handled. Would everyone assume the worst and the world ends?

        • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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          The Nazis started WW2 by sending a group of prisoners in Polish Army uniforms to attack a German radio station close to the border. I’m sure Putin is familiar with the history, and if he needed a casus belli, would consider it.

          Not that it would make attempting to invade Finland (especially with Russia’s depleted forces) any less idiotic. At this stage, I’m not sure that Finland would even bother invoking Article 5.

  • zeppo@lemmy.world
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    Having to constantly communicate in abusive opposite-world ideas must be tiring. The notion that NATO is out to invade Russia or something is one of the most ridiculous things I’ve heard.

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          Well true but we could always just get more from overthrowing some middle eastern government. Hey remember when Syria wasn’t hell on earth? Take that Syria, bet you will let John Kerry have his pipeline next time.

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      I’ve heard arguments from sarcasmitron on YouTube that Putin actually believes his own lies. Putin is terrified that the CIA actually caused color revolutions in the 2000’s and 2010’s, and after the pro-constitution/anti-election-fraud protests in Russia in 2011, he’s been fighting against “the shadowy hand of the gay nazi west” ever since.

      • oce 🐆@jlai.lu
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        I find that less believable than the usual dictator playbook that uses foreign scapegoats to create a diversion from internal issues and justify authoritarianism.

      • zeppo@lemmy.world
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        Seems like it would happen naturally after a while. He speaks basically exactly like US Republicans and I think a lot of them actually believe their insane BS.

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          Not surprising that he literally works Republicans like sock puppets

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            He tells them what to say where it concerns Russia, but they naturally have the same sort of lying, victim blaming, playing a victim and opposite-world tendencies.

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      It’s simple. Us vs them. Not complicated like the 3D-chess he used to play in world politics.

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        More specifically, it’s not for us. It’s for the people in Russia (who have no opposing viewpoints to hear) and the… special kind of individuals down at Lemmygrad (I don’t have any sort of excuse for them)

    • naught@sh.itjust.works
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      For real… like Mr. Putin sir, we don’t want Russia. In fact, I must insist that you keep it

    • lad@programming.dev
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      It’s interesting how this might become a self-fulfilling prophecy if Russia attacks Finland

  • Roflmasterbigpimp@lemmy.world
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    My perspective on war is so corrupted, at this point.

    At one hand I want peace in Europe but on the other Hand I know Russia won’t stop until they are beaten so getting NATO involved might end this conflict faster.

    • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      It’s really disappointing, isn’t it? Putin has been given every opportunity to stop the invasion or not even start it in the first place, and in ways that would help him save face. He’s rejected all of that and insists on only violence. The only response to that is returning the violence. Defending Ukraine is the most unquestionably morally correct military action I’ve seen in my life.

      It also brings up an interesting observation – to have a peaceful society, you have to be willing to violently defend it. If another party insists you give into their demands or they’ll get violent, you have to eventually oppose them. Otherwise, if you constantly submit to them in the name of peace, they’ll eventually take away your peace. Just like a tolerant society must reject intolerant views, a peaceful society must be willing to defend themselves in war.

      • orgrinrt@lemmy.world
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        As long as we have the freedom to live in peace, we ought to.

        But the freedom doesn’t come free of charge.

    • Sanyanov@lemmy.world
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      Getting NATO directly involved will not end but will rather escalate the conflict.

      You can’t win a war, let alone against a nuclear state. This wouldn’t end well.

      • Roflmasterbigpimp@lemmy.world
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        Is there any alternative? Ukraine can’t fight forever, and Russia won’t stop.

        Poland, Finland, Germany and others are also no nuclear States. Will the threat of nuclear retaliation and counter-attack from their allies really stop Russia, or will they just wait a couple of years and then try this shit again with other states? Or do everyone needs to gearup again? I have no Idea anymore.

        • Sanyanov@lemmy.world
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          There is about 0 real solutions here, mostly just keeping war of attrition, which slowly drains Russian economy without reasonably allowing it to escalate. It is super bloody though, and it is not an option to choose willingly for either side.

          The only thing dumber than NATO doing direct strikes on Russia is Russia doing direct strikes on NATO. This is why Ukraine not joining NATO is such a big talking point in negotiations. If Ukraine goes NATO, Russia won’t be able to exert any military control over it anymore.

    • doctorcrimson@lemmy.today
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      I’ve wanted to fight Russia since they annexed Crimea. I knew it wouldn’t end there, and I was proven right. If they manage to obtain the natural resources of Ukraine then it will just keep escalating. The thing is, though, Russia has lost so many troops that they could easily be swept, right now. Now has never been a better time for either the EU or NATO to force Russia into demilitarization and reparations, as well as putting more economic pressure on the Chinese Dictatorship.

      One thing I don’t want, though, is a direct conflict with China. Those fuckers need to try fixing their own shit, first. Idk if that makes me strong against the weak and weak against the strong, but there is simply too much to lose for all sides in that sort of conflict, unlike the very weakened and destabilized Russia.

      • cuntonabike@lemmy.world
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        I’ve wanted to fight Russia since they annexed Crimea.

        I’m sure you’ll be the first to volunteer for the front lines then.

        • doctorcrimson@lemmy.today
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          Goddamn right I would. Finally a cause worth fighting for, many Americans would view it as a dream come true.

        • Supercritical@lemmy.world
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          Exactly. I hate when people lead off with that. It assumes their personal involvement in the war does anything other than make themselves feel less hopeless.

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            Exactly for real, mate, I’d be digging those trenches. Didn’t expect that, did you? Thought you had the ultimate “Gotcha!” but no. I’m probably one of the few people in this comment section even fit to serve. Parrot more talking points, why not?

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                Why would I join up to fight for oil? I just explained that the source of my frustration is the fight that I want to fight is not a priority of my nation.

          • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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            I understand their point from a geopolitical strategy perspective, but you always have to step back and ask yourself if you’d be willing to personally sign up. I would love to see Russia beaten and Putin ousted too, but I’m not willing to physically go do that, so I can’t exactly expect others to.

            Not to mention, I’m old enough to know that it would never go as planned. We’d end up in forever war that kills thousands and thousands of innocent people and puts warlords in charge instead of a clean coup and instant transition to peaceful democracy.

        • doctorcrimson@lemmy.today
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          So does Ukraine, so why hasn’t Russia tried anything with them? Oh because there is no winning a Nuclear War, idiot.

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              Maybe. The issue is we don’t know. Are our missile defense systems able to take down that 1%? How reliably? What if that’s 5% instead?

              It’s all a game of probability, and all it takes is 1 missile to slip through. The only 0% chance is if no nukes are fired in the first place.

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        I just feel hopeless tbh. It feels like diplomacy failed or was the wrong tool to begin with. You can’t argue with someone when their point is, “I want your land and you dead.” Every Compromise seems to be a loss at this situation. War is never good. But is not going to War even worse? I just don’t know anymore.

        • doctorcrimson@lemmy.today
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          I’m in an even worse mental state over this, I see war with the violators as a clear logical conclusion with great benefit for future generations, but my state is going to sit on their asses and do nothing.

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            I appreciate a careful consideration of going to War but now it seems to set a dangerous precedent. And no one really know what will happen if Russia attacks, let’s say Poland or one of the Baltic states. Is NATO really ready for nuclear War? Or will they just shy away because it’s too risky? Maybe I’m just pessimistic about the whole thing but how could you be not?

            • JeffKerman1999@sopuli.xyz
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              NATO will retaliate with nuclear weapons if it detects that nuclear weapons have been launched by the enemy. So the response would be conventional.

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              1 year ago

              Mutually Assured Destruction has been around for so long that nobody can possibly win in Nuclear War. In fact, Ukraine is a nation with Nuclear capacity, since they obtained 1,700+ Soviet Era nuclear weapons upon their independence in 1991. If Russia was going to pull the Nuclear War card they would have done so a long ass time ago.

              If Russia Attacks a much stronger nation than Ukraine like Finland, then we know exactly what will happen. The will be absolutely decimated in land and population to say the least. Modern Russia was always a paper tiger but it has become even weaker with its failed invasion.

    • Zevlen@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      We all don’t need a war with China and we don’t need a war with Russia… We need to allow the Russian people and Chinese people to have a full democracy not a fake democracy, not a flawed democracy, but a full democracy ( like Ireland for example).

      We don’t need anymore killing or wars or any of it; really. We need to act like one earth and share resources and save the planet…

      Democracies tend to get along with other democracies… That’s the only reason I bring it up 😉

      • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We need to allow

        Oh crap, I guess we didn’t realize we were sitting on the remote with the button that prevented that!

        Honestly, I appreciate the “good vibes” tone here but it’s painfully naive in any practical sense.

        • Zevlen@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Ye, “allow” / help.

          If Russia doesn’t have intervention and doesn’t get reformed by other countries it will ALWAYS go back to its corrupt/crooked ways. If it’s closed off like North Korea it will absolutely be even more extremist then now. And now is pretty fucking bad already.

          Think Japan and Germany… If they didn’t have the world get involved, they’d still be what they were in WW2.

          • lad@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            I’m not sure there is a way to “help” other than war, unfortunately

            Edit: which is a pretty crappy wayto help

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        Right and how are we going to encourage that state of affairs? Because we tried asking really nicely and that didn’t work we tried sanctions and that didn’t work and the people don’t seem that interested in rising up themselves so what do we do?

        The options are war or to ignore it.

        • Zevlen@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          No one is ignoring anything and Russian army is at great fatigue…

          I don’t know what the solution is. But new conflicts and wars aren’t a solution at all. Just a step closer to WW/// OR global genocide by nuclear weapons= mass extinction of humans … And probably a big loss of knowledge; history; culture ETC.

          NTHX

        • Zevlen@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Rising up themselves?

          They did and they also left the country. The ones who were able to anyways. The rest are brainwashed.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      If it weren’t for the existence of Russia’s massive fleet of nuclear weapons (which probably don’t actually work but it’s a hell of a risk) i’m sure NATO would have already got involved.

      The only reasonable way I can see this war ending is if the internal politics of Russia decide Putin is now too much of a problem and deal with him themselves. Then whoever takes charge backs out of Ukraine because it’s not a winnable conflict.

      I can’t see how anyone external can bring about an end to the conflict without risking massive escalation.

  • theodewere@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    it’s just a sneaky little recruitment campaign… sign up now boys, we’re forming a nice leisurely unit to sit and watch the Finns do nothing… don’t worry, we won’t accidentally send you to die like worms in a ditch in Ukraine…

  • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    According to the Russian president, Finland was “dragged” into Nato.

    And who did the dragging Vlady?

    • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Exactly. Most didn’t want to join before Putin decided to invade Ukraine.

      Putin managed to do what decades and decades of pro-NATO propaganda couldn’t. It’s almost impressive.