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Russia Attacks Ukraine (nytimes.com) 637

Russia President Vladimir V. Putin declared the start of a "special military operation" in Ukraine on Thursday, after months of speculation about Russia's intentions as it massed tens of thousands of troops on Ukraine's border. The New York Times: Addressing his nation in a televised speech broadcast just before 6 a.m. Thursday, Mr. Putin said his goal was to "demilitarize" but not occupy the country. Minutes later, large explosions were visible near Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, and blasts were reported in Kyiv, the capital, and other parts of the country. Ukraine's Interior Ministry said that Russian troops had landed in Odessa and were crossing the border. "The invasion has begun," the ministry said in a statement.

Ukraine's foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said on Twitter that Mr. Putin had "started a full-scale war against Ukraine" and had begun shelling civilian cities. "This is a war of aggression," he wrote on Twitter. "Ukraine will defend itself and win. The world must act and stop Putin. It is time to act -- immediately." Evoking the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 and the American invasion of Iraq in 2003, Mr. Putin cast his action as a long-overdue strike against an American-led world order that he described as an "empire of lies." Even as he spoke, the United Nations Security Council held an emergency meeting imploring him not to invade.
In bellicose language, Putin also issued what appeared to be a warning to other countries: "Anyone who tries to interfere with us, or even more so, to create threats for our country and our people, must know that Russia's response will be immediate and will lead you to such consequences as you have never before experienced in your history. We are ready for any turn of events." More coverage: NBC News, The Guardian and The Moscow Times.
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Russia Attacks Ukraine

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  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Thursday February 24, 2022 @01:50AM (#62297925) Homepage Journal

    Pray for Ukrainian Victory. Because only then — with Russia defeated — will lasting peace be possible.

    • by Orgasmatron ( 8103 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @02:32AM (#62298005)

      I don't think that is in the cards.

      About the only way that could happen is if Russia's actual goals differ wildly from their stated goals. From the reports that I've seen, Ukraine's navy has been destroyed. If they still have an air force, they probably don't dare use it. Any command and control centers that were in fixed locations are probably gone already.

      If Russia's actual goal is to "protect" the new republics, which are full of Russian-speaking ethnically Russian people, Russian troops will either fall back to, or never go beyond, those new republics, at least not in visible formations. If that happens, the world response will be nothing.

      The only path to a Ukranian Victory is if the rest of the world gets involved. And, the only way there will be a world response will be if Russia acts like it intends to occupy or annex the Ukranian-speaking ethnically Ukranian remainder of Ukraine. Such a scenario is only possible if Russia is lying about their intentions, and Putin is simultaneously really, really bad at strategy. The first one is pretty much a given, but the second one is a tough sell.

      My guess - world leaders claim that it would have been much worse if they hadn't delivered strongly worded rebukes to Russia. Nordstream quietly re-opens before next Winter. Nordstream 2 starts operating within a few years. 5 to 8 years from now, no one will remember this, just like they already don't remember Crimea.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 24, 2022 @05:48AM (#62298437)

        Ukraine doesn't need to win, it just needs to not give up. This is precisely what happened in Vietnam against America, what happened in Afghanistan against the Russians and what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan against the west.

        Ukraine just has to make it bloody enough for Russia that it's unviable and if all or most it's territory is seized resort to guerrilla tactics.

        And this is where Russia will struggle; Russian aircraft don't use targeting pods like the West that let them view targets from high altitude, and launch precision guided munitions at them, they have poor IRST tech. You may be thinking well, who cares? But this is a really big deal. It means Russia can't hit moving targets from high altitude, and it means they can't precision strike dug in locations from high altitude with any meaningful accuracy. It means that to deal with these types of targets from the air, it really has to come in low, and guess what? That makes it all vulnerable to Polish Groms, and American Stingers that have been provided.

        It has thousands of armoured vehicles, but has also been provided thousands of the latest man portable anti-tank weapons in the Western arsenal; these aren't last decades left overs, these are literally the latest anti-armour weapons the West fields.

        None of this is enough to stop Russia rolling through Ukraine and being tentatively press across the whole territory - it can do that on force of numbers alone, but it's enough to ensure that the more this war drags on, the more Russia's military will suffer serious depletion, it's enough to leave their military combat ineffective for at least a decade in any meaningful conflict. We're only 4 hours in an Russia has already lost 0.1% of it's airforce.

        It's also worth taking a step backing and looking at the lead up to this; on one hand you could assume that Biden's repeated briefings of "it's going to be next week, it's going to be tomorrow" and so on were examples of incompetence. Another way of looking at it is that pretty much everything they said - the recognising of breakaway regions, the false flag operations, did indeed happen, and were of little value. You can look at the fact that Putin visibly dressed down his intelligence chief on TV because he didn't want to commit to this kind of course of action, you could point to intelligence stating Russian generals didn't want to invade. You've even got a rare admission from Putin live on TV that he accepts he can't stand up to NATO conventionally followed by a reminder he has nukes though. Then contrast that to Ukraine, you've had civilians training for weeks, you've had arrival of equipment you've had widespread protests.

        So on one hand you've got Ukrainians willing to fight to defence their homeland, on the other you've got Putin whose entire invasion plans have been thrown into tatters with forewarned transparency of his plans who is now going into a war his intelligence chiefs and generals have been advising against and don't want to fight just because he's pissed off that his usual smooth methods of subversion have fallen embarrassingly flat.

        That's not a winning formula. The West couldn't even hold Afghanistan despite the number of insurgents being far lower than Ukraine can muster (~50,000 insurgents, vs. 300,000+ militarised Ukrainians) and despite the West being able to search, find, and track from high altitude with no risk to their air or armour from man-portable weapons other than IEDs.

        Providing the Ukrainians are in it for the long haul, it's all but guaranteed that Putin is going to come out of this with a severely depleted military and a bloody nose. Ukraine doesn't have to win, it just has to wait for Russia to lose. Even if Russia pulls back to Donetsk and Luhansk, then they're facing a war of attrition against a Ukraine that will be fed ever more money and weapons from the West - far more than Russia could ever hope to muster.

        I also think you're wrong about Nordstream 2 reopening, it's not dead in the water - it's not just Germany pausing

        • Indeed. And this is why the US should "sell" some aircraft to Ukraine. And by "sell" I mean paint with a Ukrainian flag but operated by the US air force. Take out most of the Russian tanks and see how the Russian army likes fighting on foot. It's clear to me that we can either engage a moderate size military action now or a full-scale global thermonuclear war later.
      • by jd ( 1658 )

        If the world wanted to respond, it would have left forces in Ukraine. And any world response would result in a World War in which nuclear weapons would be deployed. Anyone involved would be in a situation where they'd not be able to back down, Russia can't afford to lose.

        And this means Russia would use cyberwarfare, as it usually does. However, according to this side, "the 2018 NPR (the policy document that governs the use of nuclear weapons) text suggests that the administration added two additional circum

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Aighearach ( 97333 )

        I don't think that is in the cards.

        About the only way that could happen is if Russia's actual goals differ wildly from their stated goals. ...

        If Russia's actual goal is to "protect" the new republics, which are full of Russian-speaking ethnically Russian people, Russian troops will either fall back to, or never go beyond, those new republics, at least not in visible formations.

        That comment didn't even age well for an hour.

      • The only path to a Ukranian Victory is if the rest of the world gets involved. And, the only way there will be a world response will be if Russia acts like it intends to occupy or annex the Ukranian-speaking ethnically Ukranian remainder of Ukraine. Such a scenario is only possible if Russia is lying about their intentions, and Putin is simultaneously really, really bad at strategy. The first one is pretty much a given, but the second one is a tough sell.

        For starters I'm going to assume by "rest of the world" you mean NATO as no one else can even project their military all the way over to Europe in any meaningful amount of time

        After that, I think you're making a big Assumption that NATO will respond if the rest of Ukraine is invaded. The leaders of many NATO countries have specifically told their people that their military will not be involved in Ukraine. I know Boris in the UK has.

      • I'm pretty sure that the world will do nothing to protect Ukraine and call it "peace in our time." That's unfortunate. I'm not a fan of the use of military solutions but this is a case where it seems that the US can either engage now or later. Might as well get to work.
      • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @09:49AM (#62298951) Journal

        So the question here is how smart is Putin really. It seems to me he can 'take the win' here having added to the buffer between Russia an NATO, probably enjoy some economic dividends form the captured territories (excuse me new republics -LOL) and he will have done it on the cheap, in terms of losses to forces, domestic political good will, and really 'sanctions' that are not a whole lot more aggressive or debilitating than what has been in place. Meanwhile China is still more than happy to buy his energy and sell goods into the Russian economy.

        Or he can go to far and trigger a NATO response....

        Which quite honestly I think is bad for everybody. I don't care what party you belong to, the beating of the war drum is unwise. It may be that we (America) can't avoid being drawn into the fighting but that really really ought to be off the table until a bright line like an actual incursion into a NATO territory happens. Can we defeat Russia, yes for certain. Will it be like Iraq/Afghanistan/Syria where we had air superiority from day 0.. No it wont. This won't be one of those conflicts where we lose as many folks to accidents as enemy action! We will not be fighting a disorganized badly disciplined force with 40+ year old weapons.

        We will be fighting a practiced professional organization with equipment that might not have advanced as much as ours post USSR but has not be standing as still as some folks seem to think. Russia has recent practice coordinating air and ground forces in Syria that is practical rather than theoretical. In a direct conflict with American Air Force and Army they won't prevail but they will send a lot of young boys and now probably girls too home in body bags. They will destroy a lot of expensive assets. We should NOT want to do this unless we absolutely are forced into it.

    • It is time for war. Putin is desperate to use his limited attack force because he canâ(TM)t maintain an offensive. Turkish drone factories making exactly the models that beat Russia in Libya and Syria are now in the control of Ukraine with martial law. Putin gambled and lost already.
    • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @05:40AM (#62298401) Homepage Journal

      Pray for Ukrainian Victory. Because only then — with Russia defeated — will lasting peace be possible.

      Apparently needs to be quoted against censor trolls with mod points. Perhaps Putin goons are wasting some of their time on the soft target known as Slashdot?

      However, I think it's too optimistic. Ukraine cannot realistically hope to defeat Russia without substantial international support, and that is unlikely to appear. The Ukrainians can make the initial invasion moderately expensive and a long-term guerrilla war could become as expensive to Russia as Afghanistan was, but an outright Ukrainian victory doesn't seem plausible. Putin is obviously thinking of Chechen rather than Afghanistan as his model for this invasion...

      I hope I'm wrong about international support, but in particular America looks too weak and divided to be of much help. Too few Americans realize they are #ReaganRINOs and not actually part of the fake Republican Party (which is now most similar to Lenin's Bolshivik Party). Most of Europe should be afraid of Putin's success in Ukraine, but they may not have the stomach to get involved militarily. Ukraine's future looks bleak. But I remember reading about Holodomor, and I'm sure lots of Ukrainians are going to fight quite hard because of that history with Russia...

  • Think what a nothing Russia would be already if Europe didn't need Russia's oil & gas. Pretty hard to contemplate Germany turning off the spigot even now.
    • As a plot twist, they should invite Russia to join nato. Apparently russ wanted to join in the 90s shortly after the the collapse of the soviet union. Either way I think the west will go to war with China soon. I'm sure Taiwan must be thinking that the CCP will want to Ukraine them too.
    • Think what a nothing Russia would be already if Europe didn't need Russia's oil & gas.

      Like if the main export of the Middle East was broccoli instead of oil?

      • Re:Europe, oil (Score:5, Insightful)

        by N1AK ( 864906 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @05:08AM (#62298297) Homepage
        They're making a fair point. Germany made one of the dumbest geo-political decisions in history when it responded to the Fukushima disaster by panicking and closing all it's nuclear plants and throwing itself at the mercy of Russia for power and heating. Making yourself reliant on the only country that is remotely likely to start an armed conflict with you, and is openly acting to destabilise your allies, is nothing less than idiotic.
    • USA, oil, as well
      Only Canada delivers more oil than Russia to the US.

      • The US exports more oil than it imports - we are a net exporter. We are not even close to dependent on Russian oil in the same way as Germany for example.
        • The numbers mean bugger all as long as the USA happily continues to import oil from Russia. Unlike Germany that stopped the North Stream 2 project yesterday.

          • by ranton ( 36917 )

            The numbers mean bugger all as long as the USA happily continues to import oil from Russia. Unlike Germany that stopped the North Stream 2 project yesterday.

            Germany halted a new project to get oil from Russia, but didn't put a dent in the oil imports it already is getting.

            And you are partially right about the US still having dependency of Russian oil. You are wrong about the numbers not mattering though. The US gets 7% of its oil from Russia, while 34% of Germany's oil comes from there. This is a big difference. The US could easily cut off all imports of Russian oil, and the worst that would happen is a little more expensive gasoline. If Germany tried cutting o

    • Reports are that Germany has already stopped progress on Nord 2.

      https://www.reuters.com/busine... [reuters.com]
    • by jd ( 1658 )

      Russia carries out extensive trade with China and had already ceased most trading with Europe. Its natural resources are extensive and apparently it is the major supplier of a variety of metals necessary for manufacture in Europe.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 24, 2022 @01:57AM (#62297933)

    They should have been cut off from all financial markets yesterday.

    • by sxpert ( 139117 )

      would have made no difference...

    • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @02:19AM (#62297975)
      Sanctions take weeks and months to directly affect anything. Getting ahead of events by a day or 2 by imposing the sanctions before the invasions would have make the sanctions weaker because they wouldn't have been as justified and by the time the invasion did occur Putin would use the sanctions in justification of the invasion.

      By telegraphing Russia's every move before they did it and warning of the consequences ahead of time, everything has been laid bare.

      Russia is about to become a poor and weak nation, although not overnight. Its GDP is already down 30% from 10 years ago, and now it will be driven much further.

      • by chthon ( 580889 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @02:32AM (#62298003) Journal

        And if Putin was a truly great leader, he would have cared for his people and helped hem raise their standard of living. But no, oligarchs, the orthodox church (religions don't get capitals from me), expansion of his territory just shows that he is a petty dictator. And by starting the attack he has lost all last vestiges of the bit of trust that he may have had.

        • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

          by evil_aaronm ( 671521 )
          Aside from Trump, who's never met an autocrat he didn't want to fellate, no one has ever accused Putin of being a "truly great leader."
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            Aside from Trump, who's never met an autocrat he didn't want to fellate, no one has ever accused Putin of being a "truly great leader."

            Yeah, Trump was really craft, getting Putin to attack Ukraine both before and after he was president but not during ...

        • Judging from the sheer tasteless pimp style bling-bling he had his palace decorated with, he is as petty as they come.

      • by Malc ( 1751 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @02:40AM (#62298029)

        Sanctions hurt the people, not the pricks in power. How well have sanctions worked against Cuba or N. Korea or Iran? What the US has done to Cuba is immoral, and achieved nothing useful in over half a century. Russia has spent the last 8 years becoming more independent and decoupled from the West, and built connections with places like China. Incidentally, China are watching this closely because they want Taiwan back. Russia is vastly bigger than the third world countries where sanctions havenâ(TM)t worked, so what makes you think theyâ(TM)ll achieve anything? They certainly wonâ(TM)t free the people of Ukraine. Sanctions are no better than virtue signally that hurt that cause collateral damage to the wrong people.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The sanctions being imposed now are on individuals, rather than Russia as a whole, so the idea is that they don't hurt ordinary Russians. The real problem is that many of those Russians are big donors to the ruling Conservative Party in the UK, and keep a lot of their wealth in London. Obviously the Conservatives are not going to sanction the people funding them, or investigate their assets too closely, so the sanctions won't do much.

  • For me this is a call for all IT culture to act accordingly to russian networks and banks.
  • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @02:05AM (#62297945)

    Does anyone actually believe that Ukraine is run by Nazis? That NATO is somehow a threat to Russia? That the separatists begged for intervention?

    He might have well said he was saving Ukraine from an invasion from Mars.

    I'm as big a critic of the US's military adventurism as anyone, but there's a big difference between attacking a nation to try and stop a genocide or overthrow a dictator and Putin's wars that involve installing dictators and capturing territory.

    Putin is the villain in this conflict, and anyone who defends Putin is knowingly defending a villain because no one is stupid enough to think he's the good guy.

    As some point Russians need to take responsibility for their country and stop enabling monsters.

    • Putin is the villain in this conflict, and anyone who defends Putin is knowingly defending a villain because no one is stupid enough to think he's the good guy.

      Um... Trump calls Putin 'genius' and 'savvy' for Ukraine invasion [politico.com]

      • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @09:40AM (#62298915)
        I'm a big fan of not underestimating your adversaries. So maybe Putin is a genius in his own way. That doesn't mean that you want to encourage evil geniuses. But you can't parse anything that comes out of Trump's mouth so maybe that's his evil genius. In any event, I'm sure Ukraine could avoid an invasion the same way Trump did. Surrender in advance. But that's not a particularly good strategy.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @05:19AM (#62298317) Homepage Journal

      Ukraine joining NATO is a threat to Russia, just like the USSR putting missiles in Cuba was a threat to the United States. So is joining the EU, which would bring the EU's border right up to the Russian one.

      There are some Nazis in Ukraine, but they aren't running things. They are something that the parts of Ukraine that identify as Russian are upset about, but obviously don't justify a military invasion. It's really just an excuse to bolster their claims of independence, with a view to them becoming Russian again "legitimately" by some joke of a "democratic" process.

      • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @05:39AM (#62298393) Journal

        Ukraine joining NATO is a threat to Russia, just like the USSR putting missiles in Cuba was a threat to the United States. So is joining the EU, which would bring the EU's border right up to the Russian one.

        Ukraine joining NATO and the EU would not "bring the EU's border right up to the Russian one" because the EU's border is already right up to the Russian one. Estonia, Latvia and Finland all border Russia and the former two are NATO members. If NATO wanted missiles close to Moscow, there is no place in Ukraine that's closer than the land they already have.

        I also love the idea is that somehow NATO is a bigger threat to Russia than Russia is to Ukraine.

        • Mod parent up ...

          What's more, there is a distinct difference between becoming a NATO member and actually putting up missiles next to the Russian border. If NATO wanted to do that, they could have done it at will a long time ago. Latvia is some 500km away from Moscow. Can't get much closer to that. Russia in turn has the Kaliningrad Exclave, it actually borders Poland. The Iskander they had there at one point were in spitting distance of Warsaw and Berlin and could have obliterated those cities within minu

      • by nagora ( 177841 )

        So is joining the EU, which would bring the EU's border right up to the Russian one.

        This seems to me to have been the big mistake. The underestimating by the EU leadership of how important Crimea is to Russia opened this Pandora's Box right up and now people are dying. Meanwhile Boris is doing his best to make this a Falklands moment - act big on the world stage and hope everyone forgets what a cunt you are. But Russia isn't Argentina.

      • by tragedy ( 27079 )

        Russia already borders Latvia, Estonia and Finland, which are part of the EU already. There are also NATO nuclear missiles in Turkey and over other parts of Europe, all in pretty easy firing distance of Moscow. Materially, I don't think it would make much of a difference. It's not like they couldn't just launch from a nuclear sub in the Baltic sea either. There's no special threat from Ukraine. This is pretty much 100% about reclaiming lost territory that Putin thinks Russia owns. The parallels to Lebensrau

    • Does anyone actually believe that Ukraine is run by Nazis?

      Don't know. Did anyone claim that? (Genuine question.)

      That NATO is somehow a threat to Russia?

      Ok, so let's see.

      Putin asked to be accepted into NATO in 2000 and was declined.

      During the 2+4 contract talks Russia was explicitly guaranteed that a NATO expansion beyond the Elbe (that's Dreden, Germany) will never take place. NATO is now in Romania, has been for decades.

      Even if we forget for a moment that NATO military is essentially US military and US policy: NATO is arguably the most powerful military organisation ever. It was created to ensure peace

    • I'm as big a critic of the US's military adventurism as anyone, but there's a big difference between attacking a nation to try and stop a genocide or overthrow a dictator and Putin's wars that involve installing dictators and capturing territory.

      I'm against Putin's bullshit full stop, but when did the US invade a nation for the purpose of stopping a genocide or overthrowing a dictator? We generally only overthrow democratically elected leaders. Most of the rest of the time we're just invading for profit. On the rare occasion that we're stopping a dictator, i.e. Saddam, we created them by selling/giving them materiel, training, and other supplies.

  • I've gotten through the beginning, with the shelling of the mansion, and the search for bottles of booze. Iain M. Banks has never disappointed me.

  • by Rayfield k. ( 8918519 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @02:11AM (#62297959)

    What's with the deleted posts

  • Who was the idiot who kept saying China was the real danger? I recall it was skam240.
    • Itâ(TM)s only a matter of time, a short time, before China moves to uh .. Anschluss.. Taiwan.

    • by jd ( 1658 ) <(imipak) (at) (yahoo.com)> on Thursday February 24, 2022 @07:25AM (#62298631) Homepage Journal

      The Russian, Chinese (and British) governments are run by people who are seriously mentally ill and are a real and immediate danger to themselves and others. Nations only exist because people think they do, there are no meaningful borders and cultures on the two sides of any supposed border will always form a continuum.

      This doesn't mean that Russia hasn't invaded Ukraine, it has. It has done so in violation of the laws of war, as agreed and signed up to by Russia. Mind you, no country has ever followed these laws as far as I can tell. They supposedly exist to ensure that death and destruction are controlled and limited to the actual antagonists, but the reality is that militaries rely on "shock and awe" - terror - to achieve the least harm to themselves, and that means the greatest possible destruction of those not involved in ways that inspire fear.

      There are, then, five actual threats:-

      1. A complete lack of global action to deal with mental health issues
      2. A tendency to put people with severe mental health issues, including sociopathic tendencies, in charge
      3. A solid belief that war is in any way a useful way to settle differences between countries
      4. A solid belief in the myth of countries
      5. A desire to fight those wars somewhere discrete, so allowing the delusion that war is peace

      1 and 2 won't be fixed until the macho "alpha male" myth and culture are dead, buried, with a stake through the heart and enough reinforced concrete above them to ensure that they cannot return as zombies.

      3, 4 and 5 need to be dealt with together and will require society to progress rather than regress. Most societies today are a good 100-200 years behind the science and technology they're responsible for controlling. That will require a massive kick forward, only because politics is toxic and nobody is doing any worthwhile social experiments, nobody knows what "forward" would look like beyond a few slightly less archaic notions by Sanders that are still well behind where we'd need to be. Besides which, Sanders isn't popular enough to not only win the Presidency but also to rally the nation around giving the Democrats a supermajority in both Houses, and that would still only be one country out of several hundred.

      So really, there's not the slightest chance of any progress being made on those last three, not as long as violence is seen as a solution rather than a major problem. Or as the Finnish God of Keyboards put it: Death is the winner in any war. Nothing noble in dying for your religion, or your country, for ideology, for faith.

  • I said it in an earlier article that the cyber attack yesterday was the diversion tactic before the invasion, and here we are now...

  • The supposedly intellence in the west are shocked that Russia did what it has always done and supports and recognises the pro-Russian seperatists. Look at Moldova, Georgia and most recently Azerbaijan... Nothing different has happened but the media wish to whip the stupid into a frenzy.
  • by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @03:09AM (#62298077)

    Now that Russia has declared war I would suggest this is time to destroy the new natural gas pipelines from Russia before they carry any fuel. Once that flow starts it will be far more difficult to stop later.

    As I recall Nord Stream 2 is complete but it's awaiting certification. Normally this would be a technical matter but it became a political matter once Russia started to build up military forces around Ukraine. Russia is a terrorist state funded by oil and gas, like many other nations in Asia. Cut off their funding. Don't just hold up certification on the pipelines, destroy the pipelines. As long as that pipeline exists it is a signal that Europe is willing to negotiate with terrorists. Once that pipeline is gone move on to the other pipes and destroy them too.

    European nations have been talking big about moving on from fossil fuels anyway so why not move up the schedule on that? The politicians know they can't go without fossil fuels while also going without nuclear power, and they are still fighting over nuclear power because it doesn't poll well. I would think funding terrorists that declared war on a neighboring nation doesn't poll well either.

    You want to know how someone like Trump got to be POTUS? This is an example how that happens. What is going to happen in the next election? If this invasion won't get Trump elected in the next election then it's going to be someone that is a younger near carbon copy. A "mini-me"? You might not get Dr. Evil, you'll just get his one quarter scale clone instead.

    • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Thursday February 24, 2022 @03:57AM (#62298155)

      Given the situation today it is quite very likely that NS2 will never see operations. Germanys economy can shrug off the 5 billion it costed and kick solar and wind into overdrive, as they are doing as we speak. Yeah, gas prices will go up, but Germans are diciplined, if push comes to shove we'll have a few colder winters and get movin' with the overdue eco-turnaround. Besides, the US is super-eager to sell their LPG to Germany and have already upped their capacities for sea transport. Which goes to show that there are not just russian interests at stake here.

      Minister Habeck said it was a dumb idea to build NS2 in the first place and I completely agree. It was one signature from him that cancelled NS2 certification, he was just waiting in the wings for the right moment to do that. He want's to diversify and "renewably" German (and European) energy, and has strict plans to catch up on time lost already. He is green and he is smart and if the Germans aren't total dimwitts (I sure do effing hope so) they'll get moving and finally sieze the chance and get a full blown eco-turnaround going.

    • Now that Russia has declared war I would suggest this is time to destroy the new natural gas pipelines from Russia before they carry any fuel.

      There's nothing to destroy. The project's approval was pulled 2 days ago. Kind of hard to pump gas down a pipeline when the country receiving it will not take it from you.

      As long as that pipeline exists it is a signal that Europe is willing to negotiate with terrorists.

      A terrorist is only a terrorist while they terrorise. Europe is willing to negotiate with a peaceful country and it makes zero sense to destroy infrastructure.

      You may be able to speak all high and mighty from behind your armchair at the other side of the world. In the mean time my energy contract expires next week and I will go from paying

  • You can take a stand. You can turn of the services. You dont need to wait for a gov to tell you to stop doing business or turn of the services. (Im sure apple atleast can turn of the phones in most of uncontested areas f.ex.) But yeah some shareholders might cry foul if they loose some money so guess thats not happening.
  • Cut Russia off (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TheNameOfNick ( 7286618 ) on Thursday February 24, 2022 @04:50AM (#62298257)

    I mean everything. Close all borders and pipelines. Confiscate all properties and financial assets held by Russian nationals. Stop all transactions with Russia and with Russian businesses and individuals. I don't care how much Putin threatens to raise the prices of gas and oil. We're not buying from him anymore. Isolate Russia completely. Same for Belarus. Sanction everybody who keeps doing business with Russia or Belarus. Yes, China, I'm looking at you.

What this country needs is a good five cent ANYTHING!

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