Riedquat wrote: ↑Thu Feb 24, 2022 7:40 pm
Mabus wrote: ↑Thu Feb 24, 2022 5:37 pm
Yup, Putin has lost his mind completely. I guess this is what happens when you rely on paranoia and brute force to hold an entire nation hostage.
He's always been a thoroughly nasty piece of work but has never been an idiot, wondering what's made him go over the edge? He seems to have a chip on his shoulder about Ukraine (due it it spurning Russia?), and having surrounded himself with sycophantic yes-men I wouldn't be at all surprised if he's come to believe his own rhetoric, and that he's always in full control of everything and nothing he does will ever be significantly opposed. More than one past dictator has ended up a victim of their hubris.
This could be the begining of the end for Putin, the fear is that he'll take everyone else out with him.
Ukraine has been in a state of civil war with the "separatist" republics on the Russian border for 8 years; this is really an escalation of something that's been going on since then as Russia has been supplying the separatists the whole time and already sent in small numbers of troops. It's basically a massive troop surge to solve an existing problem from his point of view.
The corrupt pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych was removed from power in a revolution in 2014 and his successors (who were not entirely free of corruption themselves admittedly) turned their policies towards the EU and to trying to join NATO, both of which Putin viewed as a threat to Russian military and economic interests.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union, Ukraine has had a series of Presidents who were either pro-Russia or anti-Russia, and when Putin came to power it was the crooked pro-Russian Leonard Kuchima who was in power- he was replaced by the anti-Russian Viktor Yushchenko who won despite rampant fraud on the part of the Kuchima campaign as well as an assassination attempt that left him temporarily disfigured, but Yushchenko fell out with his allies, dissolved parliament twice and was pounded in the 2010 election that brought in the pro-Russian Yanukovych.
In short, Putin's been planning this for years; recent events have just compelled him to act now. Firstly, the world has been busy and distracted by COVID which has wrecked havoc on the world economy which makes other nations fighting an expensive war against him unlikely; secondly, the US and their allies just pulled out of Afghanistan in humiliating fashion and the public won't want to be dragged into an even bigger conflict mere months afterwards; thirdly, he's managed to consolidate his position and make Russia more self-sufficient, plus he's being supported by China who have their own territorial ambitions; and fourthly, the pandemic hit Russia hard too so perhaps he just wants to distract from issues at home
and invading Ukraine is two birds with one stone.
It doesn't hurt that Trump made things easier for him these last few years, or that both America and France have elections this year (Britain might get one too as Boris is not popular), and Germany might be mad but won't do much as they are still dependant on Russian gas and oil despite efforts to find other sources.
Tl;dr- what Putin is doing now makes more sense if you look at it as just an escalation of the crisis in Ukraine in the last several years, and Putin feels like he is in a strong enough position at present to impose his will and solve the Ukrainian "problem" more directly as America looks weak right now while Russia and China feel stronger, with COVID adding to the pressure.
I'll also add that if global warming gets worse as it is expected to in the coming decades, Russia might be a big winner as when the Arctic melts it will open up new sea routes that Russia can use, plus frozen parts of Siberia will become more habitable; and yes, Russia has been making moves to capitalise on this and declaring frozen parts of the Arctic and parts of the northern Pacific ocean to be Russian territory in anticipation of this. This is another factor- Putin thinks that the not too distant future will be good for Russia and his actions in Ukraine are just part of his investment in the future, therefore he is willing to gamble here because Russia might become strong and prosperous regardless of the outcome.