For the past three years, Russia has used missiles and drones to locate and destroy vital infrastructure in Ukraine—power plants, dams, electrical-transmission lines.
Everyone understands these attacks are acts of war, no matter how steadfastly Vladimir Putin describes them as part of a “special military operation.” When Russia targets other European neighbors, though, the West resorts to its own euphemisms to avoid directly acknowledging what Putin is doing.
Saboteurs have targeted a number of other strategically significant assets in Europe—munitions factories, crucial rail lines—along with civilian infrastructure such as warehouses and malls. Investigators believe that Russia is behind the attacks.
European officials would be better off honestly admitting the reality they’re confronting. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is only the most conspicuous part of what looks like an ever more globalized war.
Acknowledging Russia is engaging in acts of war would not oblige the EU or countries to immediately retaliate with military force. But the term war has a way of concentrating the mind. Using it might make European leaders think much harder about defending themselves when they cannot rely on the U.S.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, and arguably since the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, democratic Europe has been predisposed to think about war as an issue for Washington to handle, not as a problem requiring their own leadership.
European states might provide some soldiers and equipment but do not have the burden of any serious planning or strategizing. That lax attitude is no longer tenable. Every leader on the continent needs to understand that Putin wishes to upend the entire European order—and that the U.S. is no longer trustworthy as a long-term ally.
Although European leaders have largely refused to think about war, the EU’s member nations and other democracies on the continent still have all the prerequisites for military power. EU member nations maintain military forces with some of the most advanced equipment in the world.
Although economies of the U.S., China, and many developing countries are growing much faster, the EU, Britain, and other European democracies together have a population of about half a billion people and account for about one-fifth of world GDP.
The combination of Putin’s aggression and Trump’s indifference should be an opportunity for Europe to take charge of its own defense.
The first vital step in this realization is to acknowledge what’s already happening: Call a war a war.
⏬ Abridged (shortened) article threads ⏬ 7 min with added links 📖
Look to Washington for security? WTF is this nitwit on about? Europe had no choice after 1945 and France left NATO HQ because of the US. They literally occupied Germany, Austria and Italy for 25 years after the war.
Other than the entire historical premise being wrong, we do need to smack Russia back to the stone age and we are at war.
epSos-DE on
How about we allow Ukrainians to take evey ship and aircraft that fly’s out of Russia and then sell it for the reparation of damages in Ukraine + service fees to whoever helped ???
Grumpyoldman777 on
The global corporations control the government’s (twitter, Facebook, apple, Microsoft, media, multinationals). The governments are a bunch of greedy power monger people who are controlled by a group of share holders who are equally greedy. It’s greed which is the root cause of all the problems including global warming
BoglisMobileAcc on
Europe has to come to terms that the usa isnt reliable anymore and needs to take care of themselves in every way possible. Very importantly, militarily.
not-better-than-you on
“Investigators discovered that the vessel was crammed full of advanced surveillance equipment, which used so much power that the ship suffered from periodic blackouts.” this is not true, didn’t happen.
6 commenti
For the past three years, Russia has used missiles and drones to locate and destroy vital infrastructure in Ukraine—power plants, dams, electrical-transmission lines.
Everyone understands these attacks are acts of war, no matter how steadfastly Vladimir Putin describes them as part of a “special military operation.” When Russia targets other European neighbors, though, the West resorts to its own euphemisms to avoid directly acknowledging what Putin is doing.
Saboteurs have targeted a number of other strategically significant assets in Europe—munitions factories, crucial rail lines—along with civilian infrastructure such as warehouses and malls. Investigators believe that Russia is behind the attacks.
European officials would be better off honestly admitting the reality they’re confronting. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is only the most conspicuous part of what looks like an ever more globalized war.
Acknowledging Russia is engaging in acts of war would not oblige the EU or countries to immediately retaliate with military force. But the term war has a way of concentrating the mind. Using it might make European leaders think much harder about defending themselves when they cannot rely on the U.S.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, and arguably since the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, democratic Europe has been predisposed to think about war as an issue for Washington to handle, not as a problem requiring their own leadership.
European states might provide some soldiers and equipment but do not have the burden of any serious planning or strategizing. That lax attitude is no longer tenable. Every leader on the continent needs to understand that Putin wishes to upend the entire European order—and that the U.S. is no longer trustworthy as a long-term ally.
Although European leaders have largely refused to think about war, the EU’s member nations and other democracies on the continent still have all the prerequisites for military power. EU member nations maintain military forces with some of the most advanced equipment in the world.
Although economies of the U.S., China, and many developing countries are growing much faster, the EU, Britain, and other European democracies together have a population of about half a billion people and account for about one-fifth of world GDP.
The combination of Putin’s aggression and Trump’s indifference should be an opportunity for Europe to take charge of its own defense.
The first vital step in this realization is to acknowledge what’s already happening: Call a war a war.
⏬ Abridged (shortened) article threads ⏬ 7 min with added links 📖
[https://bsky.app/profile/johnhatchard.bsky.social/post/3lfo34ijjq22c](https://bsky.app/profile/johnhatchard.bsky.social/post/3lfo34ijjq22c)
Look to Washington for security? WTF is this nitwit on about? Europe had no choice after 1945 and France left NATO HQ because of the US. They literally occupied Germany, Austria and Italy for 25 years after the war.
Other than the entire historical premise being wrong, we do need to smack Russia back to the stone age and we are at war.
How about we allow Ukrainians to take evey ship and aircraft that fly’s out of Russia and then sell it for the reparation of damages in Ukraine + service fees to whoever helped ???
The global corporations control the government’s (twitter, Facebook, apple, Microsoft, media, multinationals). The governments are a bunch of greedy power monger people who are controlled by a group of share holders who are equally greedy. It’s greed which is the root cause of all the problems including global warming
Europe has to come to terms that the usa isnt reliable anymore and needs to take care of themselves in every way possible. Very importantly, militarily.
“Investigators discovered that the vessel was crammed full of advanced surveillance equipment, which used so much power that the ship suffered from periodic blackouts.” this is not true, didn’t happen.