> “Every U.N. Member State has a stake in what comes next,” U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said in a statement. “Russia’s actions threaten the international order that, since World War II, has stood for the principle that one country cannot unilaterally redraw another country’s borders. This principle is enshrined in the UN Charter which all Member States pledge to uphold.”
Because he says it's really Russia, so they don't get to have their own government that isn't him.
Putin has already considered all possible sanctions. It's not a price steep enough to stop him from recreating the former USSR, which we know is his goal as he has said as much.
The U.N. can and will do nothing. Putin won't let them.
But there was this article about how certain supporters of Putin, a personal friend and powerful politicians, were recently tackled by Zelensky, which praecipited Putin's ire?
> Last February, days after the Inauguration of President Joe Biden, America’s allies in Kyiv decided to get tough on Medvedchuk. ... The first inkling of Putin’s response came less than two days later, at 7 a.m. on Feb. 21. In a little-noticed statement, the Russian Defense Ministry announced the deployment of 3,000 paratroopers to the border with Ukraine for “large-scale exercises,” training them to “seize enemy structures and hold them until the arrival of the main force.”
> After the 2014 Ukrainian revolution and the flight of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych from Kyiv on 21 February 2014, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated to colleagues that "we must start working on returning Crimea to Russia."
> Within days, unmarked forces with local militias took over the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol, as well as occupying several localities in Kherson Oblast on the Arabat Spit, which is geographically a part of Crimea.
What this is all about is trying to avoid the muds of March, which makes it hard to move troops.
ah. if you note above, I took 126 guesses :D 12 just isn't enough
but it's not a game for everyone. "too random" is a common complaint. also there are days where the similarity score and how I would rank the similarity are quite different
I solved Semantle #24 in 104 guesses. My first guess had a similarity of 7.99. My first word in the top 1000 was at guess #13. My penultimate guess had a similarity of 69.46 (999/1000). semantle.novalis.org
> When asked which international economic union they would join if Ukraine could only join one, 58% of Ukrainians chose the EU. Only 21% support joining a Customs Union with Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan. If a referendum were held on joining NATO, 54% would vote to join the military alliance.
This was a poll published in December of last year.
It has more or less also done the same thing in eastern Ukraine, though with some pretence that it were "rebels" who occupied the region, while in fact everything was paid for and organised by Russia, also using Russian materials, weapons, and even soldiers.
@Vikas Probably not in the long term. But look at the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe, like Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, etc.: it was violent and terrible, and it lasted a long time and did great damage, much of which is still not healed.
@Cerberus I don't know politics in details but people do talk like Russia is India's friend and so is USA. So they don't want to end their relationship. So they remain silent instead 🤣
@Cerberus Today our PM said that world is at chaos (hinting towards the Ukraine-Russia crisis) so you should vote our government so India stays strong. This isn't what I expected from him.
(Some elections of key states are going on in India)
> After dropping to 55% in December, support for Ukraine’s NATO membership climbed back up in January and reached 62% in February, according to the survey by Ukraine’s polling organization Rating Group published Friday.
> Accession to the European Union is supported by 68% and opposed by 24% of Ukrainian respondents.