volprof
Destroyer of Nihilists
- Joined
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This is why Russia will invade at some point, they have to to supply Crimea;
BBC News - Russia fears Crimea water shortage as supply drops
Way, way, way different type of warfare that we've been involved in since 9/11 than we would see with the Russians.
Insurgencies and small unit actions are a completely different playbook than modern mechanized warfare against a military with somewhat comparable gear.
As long as we don't play nice and try to rebuild Russia, we'd wipe the floor with them.
why is that the US can invade almost any country, Iraq, Granada, Panama, etc? but if Russia does the same thing, they are scoundrels? I don't see the diff.
Ironic land bordered by water on four sides has no water.
If Russia is going to invade, it needs to do so in the next few weeks. Otherwise, due to its weird troop rotation, it won't be primed to do so again until late summer.
It wasn't always small unit actions though. I'd question Russia's gear.
I'm inclined to agree.
We've never invaded a country to take it's land and rename it America.
Putin's never heard of desalination systems.
Now who wants to go watch some Top Gun?!![]()
Love me some Top Gun. Anyhow, your comment regarding our history of invasion is a bit myopic. How else would you explain Manifest Destiny, the Mexican-American War, Hawaii, Puerto Rico (and at one point, the Phillipines), and our 10 or so other global territories? (Not all the territories were acquired by invasion, but that's beside the point.) Nevertheless, you are accurate regarding at least the last 100 years or so of our invasion policies. While Russia annexes (Kaliningrad, South Ossetia, Crimea, etc.), we install our interests but do indeed leave.
Speaking of Kaliningrad, I would reference anyone who thinks Russia justified in annexing Crimea to that little bit of hypocrisy.
It's really amazing that in 2014 you still have other countries making land grabs.
It's the Russian version of "racist."https://news.vice.com/articles/the-...-wants-to-see-a-return-to-russian-imperialism
Neo-Eurasianism is gaining increasing support among the Russian elite and political power structure. Putin included. What kills me, in particular, however, is its often blatant fascism. This from a country that has made the term "fascist" a label for any so-called enemy of the state or of the Russian people.
We both have a strong (and troublesome) history of imperialism. The difference it seems to me, however, is that Americans often tend to be far more critical of such endeavors than Russians. Of course, that's a gross generalization on my part. But I think it accurate, generally speaking.
