Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has said the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin – the Russian mercenary leader whose plane crashed weeks after he led a mutiny against Moscow’s military leadership – shows what happens when people make deals with Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

As Ukraine’s counteroffensive moves into a fourth month, with only modest gains to show so far, Zelensky told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria he rejected suggestions it was time to negotiate peace with the Kremlin.

“When you want to have a compromise or a dialogue with somebody, you cannot do it with a liar,” Volodymyr Zelensky said.

    • Veraticus@lib.lgbt
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      1 year ago

      Putin is trying to kill both. Those human beings deserve to live and they deserve a country too – the country they are dying to defend.

      • gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I think them conscripts would rather do something other dying for their country. I know I would.

        Have you ever read Catch-22? Yossarian likes to go on about how everybody is trying to kill him. If you’re a Ukrainian soldier it’s not just Putin who’s out to kill you. It’s your own government too, and apparently the average western lib on this very internet forum.

        • Veraticus@lib.lgbt
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          1 year ago

          If you believe this why are you not advocating for the Russian conscripts who are forced to fight a madman’s war of aggression and territorial expansion? Like sympathizing for the Ukrainian troops forced to fight is fine but I think you fail to realize the alternative for them is to die at the hands of the Russian military.

          Only one side here is engaged in a purely optional war of territorial expansion. And it isn’t “the west” or Ukraine.

          • gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Oh I do consider the Russian soldiers victims that should be helped to escape their situation.

            madman

            No need to figure out how or why this war broke out, Putin is simply mad. It follows from that also that you can’t reason with the guy. Do you think this is a children’s cartoon?

            alternative for them is to die at the hands of the Russian military

            You gotta explain this. Last time I checked, the civilians casualties in this war weren’t that high, and civilians can and do usually stay clear of the front lines. They might even leave the country if the men were allowed to. So if they weren’t soldiers, they almost certainly wouldn’t die at the hands of the Russian military.

            • Veraticus@lib.lgbt
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              1 year ago

              The war broke out because Putin covets Ukraine and always has. He is a kleptocrat and dictator with no interest in his own people’s happiness or their rights; he seeks personal enrichment and power and that is his goal here as well. I think “madman” is a perfectly acceptable way to describe him, and we haven’t even begun to discuss his army’s conduct in the war.

              Russia is targeting Ukrainian civilians specifically. It is even targeting children.

              Given this, why do you believe if the Ukrainians lay down their arms Russia wouldn’t continue doing exactly what it has been doing — trying to kill their civilian population and deport their children?

              There’s absolutely no evidence Russia would let anyone leave and quite a lot of evidence they would continue committing war crimes against them.

              Edit: and this article literally just got published today: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/10/world/europe/russian-ukraine-torture.html

              • gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                The war broke out because Putin covets Ukraine and always has.

                Always has? They didn’t start talking about annexation till well into the invasion. In the Minsk agreement he wanted the Donbas to remain part of Ukraine, didn’t even recognize the DPR/LPR right until the start of the invasion. Maybe, just maybe, they actually feel threatened by NATO encirclement, like they’ve been saying since basically forever, and which even prominent US politicians and foreign policy experts have been warning about. But I guess you prefer pseudo-psychological explanations to realpolitik ones. Fuck reality we got vibes!

                Given this, why do you believe if the Ukrainians lay down their arms Russia wouldn’t continue doing exactly what it has been doing — trying to kill their civilian population and deport their children?

                Why would they? “His army’s conduct” is about par for the course. You should read about how much civilian targets the US hit during the Iraq invasion. Of course the civilians will be a lot safer once the fighting stops. The goal of this invasion is not to kill as many civilians as possible, that would look way different. The Nazis had extermination squads trailing the front just committing one huge massacre after another. They had death camps. This is not what’s going on in Ukraine. Fighting age civilian men get imprisoned and “filtrated”, but are usually released after a while and then allowed to get Russian passports. “Harmless” old people and women and so on aren’t even filtrated. Ukrainian children are returned to their parents if/when they show up. This isn’t some extermination campaign.

                • Veraticus@lib.lgbt
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                  1 year ago

                  In what sense does any amount of anxiety justify a war of territorial aggression and the committing of war crimes against a population and the deportation of its children?

                  If Russia was worried about NATO there are many better ways to handle that than creating a bunch of corpses. Or trying to take Ukraine’s territory, which again they have already demonstrated their desire for after doing it in Crimea.

                  I have actual sources of the war crimes they’ve committed. Where is the proof they’re not committing the well-documented war crimes against the civilian population that you assert? That it’s simply temporary?

                  Because it is actually an extermination campaign. Putin wants the land and he doesn’t want the people on it. His actions to this point make that quite clear.

                  • gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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                    1 year ago

                    I’m not saying they’re not committing war crimes. I’m saying the goal of the war is not extermination, since an extermination war would look very different. The war crimes are very similar to what the US did in their recent wars, like Iraq. So unless you think those were extermination campaigns, then that’s not good evidence. You’d have to compare it to e.g. the Nazi’s eastern campaign, which, again, looked very different. Where are the extermination camps? Where are the ghettos? Where are the death squads? Did the Nazis try to make every Pole get a regular German passport? The rhetoric of liberating their quasi-Russian brothers and sisters from Banderite ideology and Western vassaldom is also very different from the Nazi “Untermenschen” crap.

                    Whether or not “anxiety” justifies the war isn’t important. We were talking about why they invaded, and they did this in the sincere belief that this was necessary to protect against a hostile military encirclement. This is not an unreasonable belief. The US would react similarly to such an encirclement, even if the other side repeatedly insists they don’t have hostile intent. Even if there is actually no hostile intent (I doubt it), that’s still not great, since plan and intent are subject to change. Who’s going to guarantee that some future administration doesn’t want to leverage the strategic advantage gained by parking an army and/or nukes near Moscow?

                    So this is what’s called a provocation, and it suggests that the Russians aren’t “mad” or irrational. They’re behaving as expected by the theory of realpolitik. This would mean that this war could be deescalated by backing off and agreeing to a neutral Ukraine.

                    Edit: Russia invading Ukraine has therefore two main goals:

                    • Prevent Ukraine from becoming a NATO member. So long as Ukraine is in a war (or just a territorial dispute) with Russia, most NATO members will not want to admit Ukraine into NATO, since that could drag them into war with a nuclear power.

                    • Drive back the anti-Russian NATO-equipped Ukrainian army (quite a large force actually) from their core territories. This would give Russia a buffer to better absorb an attack from the territory of Ukraine (which is btw the direction both Hitler and Napoleon used to attack Russia). This also suggest that Russia is probably going to try to expand the buffer zone unless Ukraine gets demilitarized and neutralized (as in become neutral), if they can.

                    The goal is not to murder Ukrainians. And the primary goal is not to take territory, that just follows from the primary goal of creating a security buffer.

        • mashbooq@infosec.pub
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          1 year ago

          Ukrainians would disagree; they’re the ones to want to fight and if their government tried to give up, they’d throw them out and find someone willing to keep going

          • gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            If they all want to fight so bad, why are the men not allowed to leave the country? Why has Zelensky recently announced a crackdown on draft dodging? Why are there so many videos of men getting dragged kicking and screaming into vans by military recruiters kidnappers?

            • Veraticus@lib.lgbt
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              1 year ago

              Why is Putin waging a war of territorial ambition and spending innocent Russian blood to do it?

              Your perspective here is backwards. One side could end this war immediately by calling back their armies and forfeiting their territorial ambitions. And it is not Ukraine.

            • mashbooq@infosec.pub
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              1 year ago

              Is this a serious question? The existence of exceptions doesn’t negate the trend. The crackdown on draft dodging is part of Zelenskyy’s anti corruption measures to bring Ukraine in line with EU and NATO standards. Do you think about your questions at all before asking them?