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Amoranemix
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I haven’t seen a real debate on the februari 28 meeting in thewhite house. It is clear that the treatment of Zelensky during thatconference in front of the press was rude and inappropriate. Butthere are many madmen in the world, especially in the USA. Just likethere are poeple who believe the earth is flat or worship God, thereare MAGA-fanatics who worship Trump.

I look at this as aEuropean. Whether the Trump administration is good for the USA isdebatable, but is clearly bad for the free world. Pubicly humiliatinga democraticly elected leader whose country is invaded by an autocratis merely one illustration of Trump’s rampage. Like Kaja Kallassaid: “The free world needs a new leader.”

It seems ludicrousto have to argue my position, but maybe I am living in an informationbuble, shielded from the good arguments that might exist in defenseof the White House treatment of Zelensky.
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Yep, seems that un-Statesmen-like Statesmen, is the new US normal.

Looks like we have to ride it out for a while.

Probably best to ignore them.
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So, you're the one that believe Ukraine should fight a lost cause. Lol. 

Ukraine has zero possibility to beat a giant like Russia, even with the help of Europe and the US, unless these countries are willing to start a third world war in which case nobody will win.

Maybe Trump has no manners to speak his mind but he's totally right when saying that Ukraine has no cards to play. Zelensky should abide by Trump's conditions, there is no other choice if he wants his country to remain standing. 
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@Amoranemix
The only possible way to have the perception that Trump was a bully is to assume that USA owes Zelensky.

Americans overwhelmingly (over 74%) want that war to end, so Americans do not feel obligated anymore.

Europe is free to expand the war at their own cost and peril if they are against peace.
Shila
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The only possible way to have the perception that Trump was a bully is to assume that USA owes Zelensky.

Americans overwhelmingly (over 74%) want that war to end, so Americans do not feel obligated anymore.

Europe is free to expand the war at their own cost and peril if they are against peace.

Trump was indeed impeached for offering a quid pro quo in the hope of finding dirt on a political rival. But six years on, the incident haunts current negotiations over ending Ukraine’s war with Russia, including a deal for continued US military aid in exchange for access to Ukraine’s valuable mineral resources.

With Zelenskyy due to visit the White House on Friday, observers warn that Trump is trying to strong-arm him again.

Greyparrot
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@Shila
Zelenskyy is free to continue the war with EU support.
Shila
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Zelenskyy is free to continue the war with EU support.

It is seen as a betrayal by America/Trump.
Ukrainians came to the call of the United States during the Iraq campaign in 2003. Today Ukrainians and Americans who served in Iraq again ...

Greyparrot
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Now Europe can have a glorious war along with Ukraine because peace is not something either want at this time. 74% of Americans want peace.
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@Amoranemix
This is one of those instances where one can frame the event in two very different, even contradictory ways depending on one’s point of view. The respective framings can both be factually correct, too, but the conclusions drawn will be quite different. If one sees continually helping Ukraine to repel an invader as “right” and being reluctant to continue helping Ukraine do that as “wrong,” then one will likely view Zelenskyy as the victim of an ambush by two boorish American leaders. If one sees brokering peace sooner rather than later as “right” and allowing Ukraine to continue dying against superior forces as “wrong,” then one is more likely to view Zelenskyy as being overconfident in his position.
Greyparrot
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@cristo71
 then one is more likely to view Zelenskyy as being overconfident in his position.
Worse than that. Trump and JD Vance came into the meeting expecting Zelensky to be open to the possibility of a cease fire. Zelensky was the one who ambushed JD Vance by questioning the "kind of diplomacy" that would lead to a cease fire...

As Devil's advocate, it could be that Trump already knew Zelensky was not interested in a cease fire under any circumstance, and made sure that was captured on TV for all Americans to see for themselves.
Amoranemix
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[quote=ilDiavolo 2]
So, you're the onethat believe Ukraine should fight a lost cause. Lol.[1]

Ukraine has zero possibility to beat a giant like Russia, even with the help of Europeand the US, unless these countries are willing to start a third worldwar in which case nobody will win.[1]

Maybe Trump has nomanners to speak his mind but he's totally right when saying thatUkraine has no cards to play.[3] Zelensky should abide by Trump'sconditions, there is no other choice if he wants his country toremain standing.[/quote]
[1] That you soeasily reach an invalid conclusion and find it funny suggests you area MAGA-fanatic, but it is too little to go on to reach thatconclusion.

[2] That is obviously false. Perhaps the case can be made that even with Western support Ukraine would still lose, but a different outcome ispossible. It is estimated that Russia can keep the war going for oneor two more years. The Western economies are 20 times the size of the Russian one. So they can maintain this level of investment muchlonger.

[3] You aremistaken. Trump wasn’t right, let alone totally right, saying Zelensky has no cards to play. Zelensky has cards, like allies andraw materials. But even if it were true, Why say it? To twist theknife in the wound? We know Trump is a jerk. He does not behave as a president should. He is not decorous, dignified or statesmanlike.
Of course if all he did was lack manners and after having bullied Zelensky increases USAaid to Ukraine, that would be easy to forgive, but I doubt that will happen.
Trump have just beenhonest (assuming that were not against his nature). He could have said that he doesn’t care about democracy and prefers autocracies like Russia over democracy. He could have said that he doesn’t care Ukraine has been wrongfully invaded and that all he cares about are America’s and his personal intrests and that he believes that it iseasier, less risky or costly to pressure Ukraine than Russia. Isuspect though that most of his followers want to see themselves as the good guys, which would be made more difficult with such honesty.

[quote=Greyparrot 3]The only possible way to have the perception that Trump was abully is to assume that USA owes Zelensky.[4]
Americans overwhelmingly (over 74%) want that war to end, so Americans do not feel obligated anymore.
Europe is free to expand the war at their own cost and peril if they are against peace.[5][/quote]
[4] That is incorrect. I don’t assume the USA owes Zelensky and yet that seemed like bullying to me.
[5] What a relief knowing that we are free to continue the war if we are against peace. I feel a lot better now.

[quote=Greyparrot 8]
Now Europe can have a glorious war along with Ukraine because peace is not something either want at this time. 74% of Americans want peace.[/quote]
War is the continuation of diplomacy by other means. Rarely someone wants war, but they want something else they are unable to achieve through diplomacy. The Kremlin wants Ukraine to be a vassal state of Russia and estimated it could not achieve that through diplomacy. When Russia invaded, Ukraine and the West did not want war, but wanted that Ukraine remains a free, independent country and estimated that diplomats would be ineffective against the Russian army.

If Trump offers Putin everything he wants in exchange for peace and offers Zelensky nothing in exchange for peace, then obviously it is Putin who wants peace.
Suppose Trump had offered both sides that Russia withdraw its army from the whole of Ukraine, including Crimea, and pays 300 billion dollar as reparations to Ukraine, who do you think would have wanted peace then?

So, lacking evidence to the contrary, Zelensky and Europe want peace, but that is of course not the only thing they want. According to the MAGA-fanatics, if an army invades your country and you resist, that implies you don’t want peace. The invador on the other hand wants you to surrender without a fight. Hence they want peace. MAGA logic at itsbest.

[quote= Cristo71 9]
This is one of those instances where one can frame the event in two very different, even contradictory ways depending on one’s point of view. The respective framings can both be factually correct, too, but the conclusions drawn will be quite different. If one sees continually helping Ukraine to repel an invader as “right” and being reluctant tocontinue helping Ukraine do that as “wrong,” then one will likely view Zelenskyy as the victim of an ambush by two boorish American leaders. If one sees brokering peace sooner rather than later as“right” and allowing Ukraine to continue dying against superior forces as “wrong,” then one is more likely to view Zelenskyy as being overconfident in his position.[/quote]
You are confusingtwo things: Whether Trump is right to pressure Ukraine into an unfavourable and unfair deal or whether he has treated Zelensky inapropriately. To the latter the answer is clearly yes. The former is debatable. It is clearly bad for the free world (something The USA used to care about), but Trump doesn’t care about that (unless he is even against the free world). He cares about himself and the USA and for them his rampage may be good.

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@Amoranemix
You are confusingtwo things: Whether Trump is right to pressure Ukraine into an unfavourable and unfair deal or whether he has treated Zelensky inapropriately. To the latter the answer is clearly yes. The former is debatable.
I’m not confusing those two things; I’m actually accounting for both, and how both are interconnected. Your response actually seems to exemplify precisely what I describe.

It is clearly bad for the free world (something The USA used to care about), but Trump doesn’t care about that (unless he is even against the free world). He cares about himself and the USA and for them his rampage may be good.
When the USA “cared about the free world,” it was also lambasted as overly interventionist and perhaps even imperialist by the free world. Now that the US is trying to be less of the free world’s policeman, and trying to incentivize free nations to have a bigger stake in protecting that freedom, it gets a reaction such as yours. “Damned if you do; damned if you don’t.”
Greyparrot
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@Amoranemix
War is the continuation of diplomacy by other means. 
Yes, so we agree, this is the kind of "Diplomacy" Zelenskyy demands, and not the kind that Trump desires.

So when Zelenskyy rudely interrupted Vice-President Vance and called him "JD" and asked him "What kind of diplomacy"... he was affirming that this is the kind of diplomacy that he wanted. A continuation of the war.

According to the MAGA-fanatics, if an army invades your country and you resist, that implies you don’t want peace.

I don't know where you are getting that from. We are Americans over here, not "MAGA-fanatics"
74% of us want the war to end. You can want to have peace and still resist by other means. But you are just affirming what I said before.

"Ukraine-fanatics" (to equate your oversimplification) only want the kind of diplomacy that continues the war.
Shila
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I don't know where you are getting that from. We are Americans over here, not "MAGA-fanatics"
74% of us want the war to end. You can want to have peace and still resist by other means. But you are just affirming what I said before.

"Ukraine-fanatics" (to equate your oversimplification) only want the kind of diplomacy that continues the war.

Trump seems to genuinely feel that he and Vladimir Putin forged a personal bond through the shared trauma of being persecuted by the Democratic Party. Trump is known for his cold-eyed, transactional approach, and yet here he was, displaying affection and loyalty. (At another point, Trump complained that Zelensky has “tremendous hatred” toward Putin and insisted, “It’s very tough for me to make a deal with that kind of hate.”) He was not explaining why a deal with Russia would advance America’s interests, or why honoring it would advance Russia’s. He was defending Russia’s integrity by vouching for Putin’s character.
Double_R
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@Amoranemix
It seems ludicrousto have to argue my position, but maybe I am living in an informationbuble, shielded from the good arguments that might exist in defenseof the White House treatment of Zelensky.
You're not, the entire thing is beyond absurd. TDS is little more than a clear pronouncement of projection. The real derangement is dealing with a US President who thinks the obstacle to peace is an ungrateful president of Ukraine and not the guy who is literally invading his country.
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@Greyparrot
Americans overwhelmingly (over 74%) want that war to end
So do the Ukrainians genius. Here's a crazy thought; if you want the war to end, then blame the guy trying to invade another country.
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@Double_R
if you want the war to end, then blame the guy trying to invade another country.
Yes, blaming is the only path to a negotiated peace. Or is it?

It's far more likely blaming is the only path to continue the war. And make no mistake, Zelenskyy demonstrated fully that he is determined to continue this war.

When, not if Ukraine can no longer sustain its resistance to the liberation of the Donbas, then the war will likely end with Russia imposing its terms. Without a negotiated settlement, the only outcome is determined by military capability and external support. When that support weakens and Ukraine's defenses break, the conflict will end through force rather than diplomacy. For a president desperate to hold on to power, that is the sacrifice Zelenskyy is willing to make for all of Ukraine.

Another likely scenario is a second coup much like the 2014 coup where yet another elected president is violently ousted from Ukraine, and then a negotiated peace may be possible.

Or perhaps a more civil impeachment this time around?
Shila
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It's far more likely blaming is the only path to continue the war. And make no mistake, Zelenskyy demonstrated fully that he is determined to continue this war.
And why not? Russia still occupies 20% of Ukraine’s territories.
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@Greyparrot
It's far more likely blaming is the only path to continue the war. And make no mistake, Zelenskyy demonstrated fully that he is determined to continue this war.
What do you make of Zelenskyy’s latest letter to the President signifying his renewed willingness to negotiate a peace settlement?

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@cristo71
That probably came on the heels of his impending impeachment by the Ukraine parliament.
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@Greyparrot
That probably came on the heels of his impending impeachment by the Ukraine parliament.
I don’t think that MP is much more than an upstart in the grand scheme of things. I think it is more likely that Trump’s aid suspension provoked Zelenskyy’s change of heart. What I’m asking is: do you see Zelenskyy’s letter as pointing to a way forward toward peace?

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@cristo71
It depends if Zelenskyy can agree with Trump to find a way to end the war.
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@Greyparrot
When that support weakens and Ukraine's defenses break, the conflict will end through force rather than diplomacy.
It's not diplomacy when the country being invaded decides to make concessions to the country invading it. That's called surrender.

If you don't believe in defending against hostile takeovers just say that, but stop dishonestly pretending you're some kind of peace advocate while people like myself who think we shouldn't empower and encourage global bullies are warmongers.

You're ok with rewarding Russia for invading Ukraine. Look in the mirror and say it loud and clear. Then maybe we can have an honest discission about it.
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@Double_R
Im very okay with admitting this isnt a war worth 150 billion in American dollars to continue.
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Letting Putin win will not bring peace, the war will just move to where he wants it to go next.

In the "Munich Agreement" of 1938, Britain and France allowed Hitler to annex the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia believing that would bring peace...,...and we saw how that worked out.   
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@Sidewalker
Letting Putin win will not bring peace, the war will just move to where he wants it to go next.
Sure, it's still not worth another 150 Billion to stop EU from nuking Ukraine into dust.
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@Double_R
If you don't believe in defending against hostile takeovers just say that
I don't believe we should give Russia any aid to prevent Maidan nationalists from retaking the Donbas. Russia can foot that bill all on their own.

150 Billion was already too much to spend supporting the Maidan nationalists. USA hasn't failed this much in regime changing since the Bay of Pigs fiasco.

Russia got itself into this mess and can handle the costs of holding onto the Donbas as its goal. The amount spent on Ukraine has been staggering, whether that money was well spent or just to fuel a prolonged stalemate to enrich others. At some point, nations have to decide how much intervention is actually in their best interest versus just sinking resources into an endless conflict that has no benefit for America. Neither Russia nor the Maidan nationalists give a crap about America. They really don't care if you stand for or against them.

The $150 billion spent since 2014 on backing the Maidan nationalists has been a massive financial commitment with limited success, much like previous U.S. interventions in places like Iraq, Afghanistan, and Cuba. Regime change is a tough game, and it’s clear that the U.S. has overestimated its ability to impose long-term political shifts. Rather than pouring more money into a conflict with no clear end in sight, it makes more sense to acknowledge the failure, reassess the strategy, and focus on areas where U.S. interests can actually be protected without further escalation. It’s a lesson in humility, really.
Amoranemix
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Cristo71 9:
thenone is more likely to view Zelenskyy as being overconfident in his position.
Greyparrot10:
Worse than that. Trump and JD Vance came into the meeting expecting Zelensky to be open to the possibility of a cease fire. Zelensky was the one who ambushed JD Vance by questioning the "kind of diplomacy" that would lead to a cease fire...[5]

As Devil's advocate, it could be that Trump already knew Zelensky was not interested in a cease fire under any circumstance, and made sure that was captured on TV for all Americans to see for themselves.[6]

[5] How does asking a question about Vance’s diplomacy nonsense qualify as an ambush?
[6] You are cherrypicking. Although I suspect your intention was to show fault with Zelenskyy, it illustrates, if you are right, the disingenuous intentions of the hosts: humiliate Zelenskyy. I am sure there are people who think that is appropriate, but are there brave enough to admit that is what they think?
Now, I agree it is not clear why Zelenskyy refuses a cease-fire, but he clearly doesn’t trust Putin and a cease-fire would allow Russia to rearm.
Itis unlikely the hosts thought as you suggest that Zelenskyy would notaccapt a cease-fire under any circumstance, for that would be stupid of them.

Amoranemix11:
You are confusing two things: Whether Trump is right to pressure Ukraine into an unfavourable and unfair deal or whether he has treatedZelensky inapropriately. To the latter the answer is clearly yes. The former is debatable.
I’mnot confusing those two things; I’m actually accounting for both,and how both are interconnected. Your response actually seems to exemplify precisely what I describe.

How does does me disputing that the perception of who is responsible forthe inglorious press conference depends on one’s viewpoint of Ukraine’s rights and the USA’s obligations (disputing that theyare intereconnected) exemplify what you wrote?
Iam sure there are people believing most of the blame lies with Zelenskyy, but anything can be believed. Pick some preposterous nonsense and there are people believing it. I believe there is anobjective truth and that these people are wrong.

Amoranemix11:
Itis clearly bad for the free world (something The USA used to careabout), but Trump doesn’t care about that (unless he is evenagainst the free world). He cares about himself and the USA and forthem his rampage may be good.
Cristo71 12:
Whenthe USA “cared about the free world,” it was also lambasted asoverly interventionist and perhaps even imperialist by the freeworld. Now that the US is trying to be less of the free world’spoliceman, and trying to incentivize free nations to have a biggerstake in protecting that freedom, it gets a reaction such as yours.“Damned if you do; damned if you don’t.”

a) Who has damned the USA for trying to incentivize free nations to have a bigger stake in protecting that freedom?
b) The USA presented itself as the defender of the free world. However, most of the USA interventions had at least in part a different agenda, like the war in Vietnam and the Grenada invasion. Moreover, the interventions in civil wars usually proved ineffective. If the USA had limited its operations honourable causes (like USAID, the kind of thing Trump doesn’t want) and interstate wars, there would be much less ground for critic. I am sure the Ukrainians don’t mind the USA supporting them.

Amoranemix 11 to Greyparrot:
[4] That is incorrect. I don’t assume the USA owes Zelensky and yet that seemed like bullying to me.
[5] What a relief knowing that we are free to continue the war if we are against peace.I feel a lot better now.
Greyparrot:
[norespone]
So there is no dispute that Zelenskyy’s treatment was inappropriate. It’s just that some people prefer not the draw attention to that fact.

Amoranemix11 to Greyparrot :
Waris the continuation of diplomacy by other means. [ . . . ]
Greyparrot13 :
Yes, so we agree, this is the kind of "Diplomacy" Zelenskyy demands, and not the kind that Trump desires.[6]

So when Zelenskyy rudely interrupted Vice-President Vance and called him"JD" and asked him "What kind of diplomacy"... he was affirming that this is the kind of diplomacy that he wanted. A continuation of the war.[7]

Nice selective quoting, especially since the part you omitted is relevant.
[6] You are mistaken. Zelenskyy does not demand that kind of “diplomacy”. Zelenskyy asks for help defending his country against invasion. However, it is the kind of “diplomacy” Putin, Trump’s coveted role model, uses.
[7] Why do you selectively criticize Zelenskyy, given that Trump and Vance had much more to be criticized for?
Why are you not criticizing Russia for using that kind of “diplomacy”? Putin didn’t ask anyone’s permission for using the kind of“diplomacy” Vance and other Trump fans blame Zelenskyy for wanting to use, he just uses it without interruption since 2014.

Amoranemix11 to Greyparrot :
If Trump offers Putin everything he wants in exchange for peace and offers Zelensky nothing in exchange for peace, then obviously it is Putin who wants peace.
Suppose Trump had offered both sides that Russia withdraw its army from the whole of Ukraine, including Crimea, and pays 300 billion dollar as reparations to Ukraine, who do you think would have wanted peace then?
Greyparrot:
[noresponse]
You forgot to answer my question.

Amoranemix 11 to Greyparrot :
So,lacking evidence to the contrary, Zelensky and Europe want peace, but that is of course not the only thing they want. According to the MAGA-fanatics, if an army invades your country and you resist, thatimplies you don’t want peace.
Greyparrot13 :
Idon't know where you are getting that from. We are Americans over here, not "MAGA-fanatics"[8]
74% of us want the war to end. You can want to have peace and still resist by other means. But you are just affirming what I said before.[9]

"Ukraine-fanatics"(to equate your oversimplification) only want the kind of diplomacythat continues the war.[10]

[8] I got that from Donald Trump. I didn’t hear Trump say that Putin doesn’t want peace. On the contrary, he said Putin wants peace. He could have said the opposite, that Zelenskyy wants peace and Putin doesn’t, but Trump clearly prefers the guy who is doing the invading over the guy is defending against an invasion.
There are also Trump-fans and MAGA-fanatics in America and I think there is a lot of overlap between these groups.
[9] I suppose there is something you said I have affirmed, but I have clearly done more than that.
[10] I don’t know what Ukraine-fanatics want, so I can’t speak for them and I don’t know why their opinion would be relevant. However, Ukrainians and most Europeans want other things too. They want the Russian army to leave Ukraine and I suspect many want Russia to pay war reparations.

Double_R16 :
So do the Ukrainians genius. Here's a crazy thought; if you want the war to end, then blame the guy trying to invade another country.
Greyparrot 17 :
Yes,blaming is the only path to a negotiated peace. Or is it?

It's far more likely blaming is the only path to continue the war.[11] And make no mistake, Zelenskyy demonstrated fully that he is determined to continue this war.[12]

When, not if Ukraine can no longer sustain its resistance to the liberationof the Donbas, then the war will likely end with Russia imposing its terms.[13] Without a negotiated settlement, the only outcome is determined by military capability and external support. When that support weakens and Ukraine's defenses break, the conflict will end through force rather than diplomacy.[14] For a president desperate to hold on to power, that is the sacrifice Zelenskyy is willing to makefor all of Ukraine.[15]

[11] Has it escaped you that Putin has blamed Zelenskyy and Ukrainian nationalists a lot? And NATO for expanding eastward? Indeed, he used it as an excuse to invade.
[12] Ok, so you and Trump not blaming Putin and you warning against blaming anyone would be consistent with not wanting to take the path to war, but why blame Zelenskyy then? 
Of course, blaming does more than pave the path to war: it showswhich side you are on.
[13] That is what Trump is aiming for as even before the negotiations he made concessions to Putin and none to Zelenskyy.
[14] You are mistaken. Military conflicts almost almost end with diplomacy.
[15] Why are you criticizing Zelenskyy again? It appears very difficultfor you to hide your bias.

Greyparrot24 to Double_R :
Im very okay with admitting this isnt a war worth 150 billion in American dollars to continue.
That’s a red herring.

Aswas probably to be expected the discussion has veered off intowhether the USA’s new stance in relation to the Ukraine war isjustifiable. However, that that the oval office ambush wasinappropriate is undisputed. That Trump is a jerk also has not been disputed.

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@Greyparrot
Im very okay with admitting this isnt a war worth 150 billion in American dollars to continue.
Right, so given that all wars cost money, and that this particular war is entirely about stopping or at the very least not rewarding Russia from invading Ukraine, the original point not only still stands but is affirmed; You're ok with rewarding Russia for invading Ukraine.
cristo71
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@Amoranemix
How does does me disputing that the perception of who is responsible forthe inglorious press conference depends on one’s viewpoint of Ukraine’s rights and the USA’s obligations (disputing that theyare intereconnected) exemplify what you wrote?
Because one’s point of view affects one’s perceptions. Doesn’t this basically describe your position on the matter?

“If one sees continually helping Ukraine to repel an invader as “right” and being reluctant to continue helping Ukraine do that as “wrong,” then one will likely view Zelenskyy as the victim of an ambush by two boorish American leaders.”


Iam sure there are people believing most of the blame lies with Zelenskyy, but anything can be believed. Pick some preposterous nonsense and there are people believing it. I believe there is anobjective truth and that these people are wrong.
I think that there was plenty of bad behavior to go around. Again, how one assigns the lion’s share of the blame depends on one’s point of view. You actually go even further by believing that you know what is objectively the case and that you possess the correct, objective view. To me, that is akin to saying, “I know that there are many gullible people who think milk chocolate is better,  but the objective truth is that dark chocolate is clearly superior.”