Clinamenic
Binary & Tweed
Ostensibly its to pressure Putin to cease the invasion.what then is the purpose of destroying their economy?
Ostensibly its to pressure Putin to cease the invasion.what then is the purpose of destroying their economy?
I can see how targeted sanctions can have collateral damage and nth order effects that hurt the western alliance, but I don't see how they could ultimately make Putin stronger.
i explained this to Stan before but he can't get his head around it.well, one obvious way is to make Russians feel as tho they're under attack and therefore band together
also, they're not really nth order effects. the *direct* effects on commodity and especially energy markets have been evident todayI can see how targeted sanctions can have collateral damage and nth order effects that hurt the western alliance, but I don't see how they could ultimately make Putin stronger.
Do you also take issue with the term collateral damage?also, they're not really nth order effects. the *direct* effects on commodity and especially energy markets have been evident today
so it is "about" the russian ppl, in other wordsOstensibly its to pressure Putin to cease the invasion.
Putin, and surrounding state officials, whom I'm not familiar with.Yeah I'm under the impression that the west is willing to gamble with the welfare of Russians in order to pressure Putin, the individual, to cease the invasion.
Yeah I see that logic, that the sanctions can be intended to pressure Putin toward peace while also pressuring people to turn against Putin. It also seems like the latter is predicated on the western narrative prevailing over the Kremlin narrative throughout Russian culture, which I have doubts about and which goes to your point. That said, this is also just speculation.the logic is: crash russian economy, turn ppl against putin, putin abandons war in ukraine. obvs there's two major issues there. what if crashing economy doesnt have that effect and what if putin doesnt depend on public opinion to prosecute the war.
Crashing the economy might, at the very least, mean there is no longer enough money to fight the war.the logic is: crash russian economy, turn ppl against putin, putin abandons war in ukraine. obvs there's two major issues there. what if crashing economy doesnt have that effect and what if putin doesnt depend on public opinion to prosecute the war.
Unlike most of you lot I have been to Russia quite a few times - I've spent time in several Russian cities, have a number of friends there and also I have Russian friends in various other countries. I am therefore best placed to give an insight into how Russians would feel about having missiles launched at them. I can tell you, they wouldn't like it.suppose we launched missiles at Russia. what effect would that have on russian popular opinion?
I think vim's question might be more like: "in that situation, would Russians focus their anger only on the people firing missiles at them, or would a critical percentage of that anger be directed at Putin for creating the situation?"Unlike most of you lot I have been to Russia quite a few times - I've spent time in several Russian cities, have a number of friends there and also I have Russian friends in various other countries. I am therefore best placed to give an insight into how Russians would feel about having missiles launched at them. I can tell you, they wouldn't like it.
Yeah and I'd say that mostly depends on how well western narratives can contend with top-down narratives in Russia. I really have no idea.I think vim's question might be more like: "in that situation, would Russians focus their anger only on the people firing missiles at them, or would a critical percentage of that anger be directed at Putin for creating the situation?"
To echo craner, this war might be the tipping point at which that control is no longer effective enough. If soldiers have been led to believe that most Ukrainians would welcome them as liberators, and any that didn't would be mad vicious Nazis, but find that neither of those things are true - that they're ordinary people who hate Putin and love their country, but have no intrinsic animus against Russians - then those disillusioned soldiers returning home could have a similar effect on the Putin regime as the defeated Red Army vets coming home from Afghanistan did on the late USSR in the 80s.Yeah and I'd say that mostly depends on how well western narratives can contend with top-down narratives in Russia. I really have no idea.
Yeah I hope thats the case for a significant portion of Russian culture, and as far as I can tell its possible.To echo craner, this war might be the tipping point at which that control is no longer effective enough. If soldiers have been led to believe that most Ukrainians would welcome them as liberators, and any that didn't would be mad vicious Nazis, but find that neither of those things are true - that they're ordinary people who hate Putin and love their country, but have no intrinsic animus against Russians - then those disillusioned soldiers returning home could have a similar effect on the Putin regime as the defeated Red Army vets coming home from Afghanistan did on the late USSR in the 80s.