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teatree | 4 years ago
Hypothetically, wouldn't the US would have serious concerns if Mexico decides to join a Chinese alliance.
(I am not justifying a war, just wondering what could have been done on both sides to prevent it)
teatree | 4 years ago
Hypothetically, wouldn't the US would have serious concerns if Mexico decides to join a Chinese alliance.
(I am not justifying a war, just wondering what could have been done on both sides to prevent it)
awb|4 years ago
Yes, countries prefer weak neighbors. A powerful alliance on your border is a potential threat (or deterrent to expansion).
No in the sense that the US only has 90k troops in NATO countries, or about 10% of Russia’s standing military. So it’s not like troops are messing at their border or enough to threaten an invasion. It’s very much a deterrent.
Also no in that the US, Russia and China are nuclear powers. The US should have little concern of a Chinese ground assault from Mexico as it could trigger a large scale nuclear war, defeating the purpose of the invasion. Similarly with Russia, their nuke arsenal means that no one will consider attacking them or invading their borders.
hef19898|4 years ago
xdennis|4 years ago
No. NATO is a defensive alliance. Easter European countries are in NATO specifically to protect against the kind of aggression you're seeing in Ukraine now.
Russia used to regularly invade neighbors: Poland 1939, Romania, Baltic countries, Finland 1940, Everywhere 1944, Hungary 1956, Czechoslovakia 1968. None have been invaded since joining NATO.
NATO expansion is removing threats, not creating them.
glogla|4 years ago
If US attacked and annexed several Central American nations over last two decades, except the ones who are part of pre-existing "defense against the US" alliance, Mexico wanting to be in it would be perfectly rational and normal.
alde|4 years ago
usrme|4 years ago
vincnetas|4 years ago
jollybean|4 years ago
NATO is not organised well enough to conduct offensive operations on that scale, moreover, there is no state on earth, including US and China that could take parts of Russia and hold for long.
But that aside, the very real political and economic situation in the world would make it unfathomable. There's basically no 'strategy game' where the West would have the intent let alone ability to truly invaded Russia.
The 'NATO' issue is almost entirely a canard, a very easy argument that Putin uses to cause confusion, allow other supporters (i.e. China) to make empty arguments at the UN etc.
Putin is literally using the 'UN Charter' to as cover to legitimise his invasion of Ukraine.
Putin has used the term 'genocide' constantly in the last decade to refer to what is happening in Donbass even though this is obviously not the case.
Putin's implication that 'he's invading Ukraine to stop fascist country, to protect Russian speakers and to 'keep peace'' is basically rubbish, as are his arguments with respect to NATO.
There's a grain of truth in it, of course there is violence in Donbas, but amplifying the issue is the very obvious ruse.
Their playbook is wide open - we know their doctrine, we know how they use misinformation, we know how they argue, we know their intentions. It looks pretty bad on us to allow any of this to happen.
FYI - Western Media has been making a lot of money arguing in public lately, and it's appalling what we're seeing on some of the news outlets, and some of the statements by US public officials. Some people are 'taking a stake' in the situation as they would any other news item, i.e. 'jockeying for position' on the issue. It's disgusting.
jacquesm|4 years ago
The only reason there is violence in Donbas is because of the previous undeclared Russian invasion of that territory as well as fomenting unrest there and elsewhere in Ukraine. Not to mention shooting down a commercial airliner.
It's about as truthful as Hitler arguing there is violence in the West of Poland in October 1939.
amcoastal|4 years ago
foxfluff|4 years ago
I think the real problem is that NATO is a threat to Putin's imperialistic dreams.