Russia's objectives: control all of Ukraine, which was democratising and wanted EU membership. The threat it posed was potentially showing Russians a better way of life. Other than perhaps Crimea everything else is irrelevant. Russia didn't care about Donbas, Girkin dreamt all that up, Russia got behind it as an afterthought with a small force probably because they hoped to exchange Donbas for Crimea. Ukraine rejected negotiating away territory so it became a useless bargaining chip. Not convinced Russia care a great deal about Ukrainian NATO membership. Not convinced Russia care about natural resources, considering how much Russia has.Calculon wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2024 2:08 amRussia incorporating a large percentage of Ukraine including most of its natural resources, and having control over Ukraine's sovereignty to the extent that it veto it's application to international organizations ...... is a fuckiing terrible outcome and one which the Russians would be absolutely delighted with._Os_ wrote: ↑Fri Nov 08, 2024 10:14 pm Obviously Trump committing to ending the conflict before he's in office, strips him of his strongest negotiating position, that'll he'll continue supporting Ukraine or increase the conflict. But his plan doesn't appear to make much sense. There's two options without either side winning:
Frozen conflict: There's a DMZ like in North/South Korea, neither side gives up their claims, neither side has any control over the sovereignty of the other.
Finlandisation: Ukraine gives up land for peace, could also be some control by Russia over Ukrainian sovereignty (membership of NATO).
These are two different and distinct outcomes, they're not the same. If Ukraine is formerly ceding territory and Russia has some control over Ukrainian sovereignty, where is the peace and why is their a DMZ patrolled by Europeans (and not the brilliant US partners, of course)?
Finlandisation isn't the worst outcome, if there's enough in the deal to actually become Finland.
There's two options.
Finlandisation: Finland gave up 10% of its territory, remained neutral during the Cold War, accepted restrictions on its military. Stalin originally wanted to annex Finland entirely. Ukraine currently has control over most of its territory including some coastline/ports. If Ukraine retains the 80% of its territory it currently controls, and there's enough in the deal (EU membership) to become a successful country, then Putin hasn't achieved his main objective.
Frozen conflict: no conflict termination and potentially no peace. Russia has significantly stronger fundamentals than Ukraine, it could be quite different to North/South Korea. Ukraine still wouldn't have the territory it doesn't control currently. Still no NATO membership because it's at war with Russia. This could be economically suboptimal. West not interested anymore, frozen conflict like Moldova and Georgia, weak economy, intense Russia interference. Possibility of turning back towards Russia in a generation if they decide it hasn't worked and feel betrayed.
Rejecting both means continuing trying to beat Russia in a land war. Not a safe bet when Russian troops remain committed and tolerant of casualty rates they've not seen since WW2. The risk being Ukraine runs out of men before Russia does materiel. Could end up forced into making that bet, losing means Ukraine formerly ceding territory and rump Ukraine becoming a vassal.