War in Ukraine

And? We have respected Ukraines independence and sovereignty and it's existing borders. We lived up to our assurance. Russia hasn't lived up to it's guarantee and our only obligation per the agreement is to take it to the UN.
We disagree. Tell you what I’ll agree to your interpretation if we the US formally declare we withdraw from the agreement and return to Ukraine all of their property they surrendered how’s that?
This is one of the key areas of my confusion. I simply don't understand how we went from reaffirming to a duty to perform once those boundaries were violated by Russia.

I feel like there is stuff in between these to points of discussion that everyone seems to grasp but I am clueless about.
 
Those words are not interchangeable in the other languages. At least according the link ND40 provided yesterday. You can't make that connection on the English standard and disregard that standard doesn't exist in the other language.

My contention is that they are interchangeable when used with the accompanying language because per the actual verbiage used following "assured" or "guarantee" we have lived up to either. Now if the verbiage that followed was something like "we will defend you and your territory from outside attack or economic coercion" then yeah the words would mean different things.
 
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That is one of the points highlighted yes. And that is the argument hog is making. Ukraine very much wanted us to be their voice if needed and we agreed. We disagree in that being the only obligation when all three language versions are taken into consideration
hallelujah. I can feel clarity on the horizon for me.

Are there other (or different) obligations (specific duties to perfom) in the other languages in the FULL document and not just the memorandum section?
 
hallelujah. I can feel clarity on the horizon for me.

Are there other (or different) obligations (specific duties to perfom) in the other languages in the FULL document and not just the memorandum section?

The memorandum is the full document.
 
My contention is that they are interchangeable when used with the accompanying language because per the actual verbiage used following "assured" or "guarantee" we have lived up to either. Now if the verbiage that followed was something like "we will defend you and your territory from outside attack or economic coercion" then yeah the words would mean different things.
I think that makes sense from our English-speaking perspective. The issue is the equivalent words in the other languages do not convey the same standard.
Example: Mile and Kilometer are both units of distance. We can agree we will travel several miles / kilometers to reach our destination. But we're going many more kilometers than we are miles to arrive.
 
Is your first paragraph essentially saying: Ukraine gave up a lot and there is no way they would have done that without the expectation that Great Britain and America were going to provide protection, aid, military equipment. So even though there are no references to those items, we have a duty to meet Ukraine's expectation?

I agree affirming Ukraine's existing boundaries is in the memorandum. But where I get lost in the weeds is this...it seems once those boundaries were violated we (USA and GB) have some duty to assist in protecting those boundaries. (Kind of like the point of clarity I am asking about in my paragraph above)
Not quite as strong as you worded it but yes I believe for what was given up substantial value to Ukraine and us (nuclear proliferation) that has to be factored in at par value to any response by us. It’s worth more than “hey UN listen to what Ukraine has to say

I wish we had never entered this agreement. But at this point I view us as the azzhole insurance adjuster making pedantic points to try and disallow a claim. Nobody likes that SOB
 
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Isn't the reaffirmation about what is existing? And isn't the remedy outlined if the sovereignty and existing borders are violated to take it to the UN Security Council?
I hate to sound like a broken record but if we are guaranteeing those existing boundaries I think that comes with a call to direct action. That’s all.
 
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Not quite as strong as you worded it but yes I believe for what was given up substantial value to Ukraine and us (nuclear proliferation) that has to be factored in at par value to any response by us. It’s worth more than “hey UN listen to what Ukraine has to say

I wish we had never entered this agreement. But at this point I view us as the azzhole insurance adjuster making pedantic points to try and disallow a claim. Nobody likes that SOB
Ok. Thank you. This really helps me with the context with which I was struggling.
 
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I hate to sound like a broken record but if we are guaranteeing those existing boundaries I think that comes with a call to direct action. That’s all.
NO. Dont hate to be a broken record.

Repeat as many ways as you can muster so I can understand better.

This post of yours is also helpful like the last one.
 
This is one of the key areas of my confusion. I simply don't understand how we went from reaffirming to a duty to perform once those boundaries were violated by Russia.

I feel like there is stuff in between these to points of discussion that everyone seems to grasp but I am clueless about.
Honestly I think we are all trying to reconcile points not clearly defined. I include myself in that. But what I put for is a clear remedy to the situation is it not? To this point we have committed significant resources we can’t ignore that. And the level we have committed was never specified in detail. So if we want out then let’s formally withdraw
 
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hallelujah. I can feel clarity on the horizon for me.

Are there other (or different) obligations (specific duties to perfom) in the other languages in the FULL document and not just the memorandum section?
What full document? It is literally five pages total for each language. That is all that was entered in the UN database. And that is a complete joke when you consider the capital referenced.
 
I hate to sound like a broken record but if we are guaranteeing those existing boundaries I think that comes with a call to direct action. That’s all.

Our assurance/guarantee was that we wouldn't violate those boundaries and if someone else did we would take it to the UN.
 
Not quite as strong as you worded it but yes I believe for what was given up substantial value to Ukraine and us (nuclear proliferation) that has to be factored in at par value to any response by us. It’s worth more than “hey UN listen to what Ukraine has to say

I wish we had never entered this agreement. But at this point I view us as the azzhole insurance adjuster making pedantic points to try and disallow a claim. Nobody likes that S
The "at par value to any response by us" is inferred or implied. Either implied by our man Pfifer doing the negotiating, or inferred by Ukraine's envoy. And because those were inferred/implied, Ukraine has come calling and if do ONLY what is specified in the document, we are now the bad guys because we negotiated in bad faith.

Is that close to your position?
 
The "at par value to any response by us" is inferred or implied. Either implied by our man Pfifer doing the negotiating, or inferred by Ukraine's envoy. And because those were inferred/implied, Ukraine has come calling and if do ONLY what is specified in the document, we are now the bad guys because we negotiated in bad faith.

Is that close to your position?
It’s close but with some amplification. The Ukraine parliament approved a document stating guarantee. The US Congress never approved anything. Ukraine thought they had “guarantees” and we smiled and nodded and all signed the documents as written in their three languages with the glaring inconsistencies. That is a horrible look to me especially for what was surrendered. The three documents don’t even agree on when it goes into effect. It’s a horrible document
 
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Honestly I think we are all trying to reconcile points not clearly defined. I include myself in that. But what I put for is a clear remedy to the situation is it not? To this point we have committed significant resources we can’t ignore that. And the level we have committed was never specified in detail. So if we want out then let’s formally withdraw
I have complete agreement with you on this.

Whether we had a specified duty or an implication of action beyond UNSC action, it is really a moot point now. Why?...because we have provided aid and weapons. That aid communicates to the world we (the USA) ACTUALLY AGREEs with Ukraine's position we have a duty to provide assistance.
 
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Eh I don’t think there will ever be clear definition and that was the entire point.
I have an intense desire to understand how others think even if I don't agree with their conclusions.

So, i am seeking clarity in your process and not necessarily agreement of definitions in the document.
 
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I have complete agreement with you on this.

Whether we had a specified duty or an implication of action beyond UNSC action, it is really a moot point now. Why?...because we have provided aid and weapons. That aid communicates to the world we (the USA) ACTUALLY AGREEs with Ukraine's position we have a duty to provide assistance.
And it has been significant. And the degree of aid was never defined. So if we think we are done let’s formalize that stance. FTR I am not advocating for that I am just pointing to that as the obvious defined path forward if we want out
 
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