Crosswords12 mins ago
The War In Ukraine
116 Answers
'Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will cost the global economy $2.8 trillion in lost output by the end of next year—and even more if a severe winter leads to energy rationing in Europe.'
With the outlook to be a continued process of slaughter for months, maybe years to come of life (human & animal) & destruction of habitation & infrastructure at a rate not seen since WW2. Is the loss of a small region of the extreme west Donbass regions of Ukraine (plus the Crimea, which has been Russian for 300 years) worth the prolongation, & possible risks of the use of nuclear & chemical weapons ?
With the outlook to be a continued process of slaughter for months, maybe years to come of life (human & animal) & destruction of habitation & infrastructure at a rate not seen since WW2. Is the loss of a small region of the extreme west Donbass regions of Ukraine (plus the Crimea, which has been Russian for 300 years) worth the prolongation, & possible risks of the use of nuclear & chemical weapons ?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Chair; // Has it not crossed your mind that if they get away with it once, they'll probably do it again and again?
Have you forgotten the history of appeasement?
I'm not suggesting appeasement - in fact I'm not suggesting anything, I really don't know, but there has to come a point where emotion needs to be tempered with intelligence & some form of dialogue & maybe arbitration has to take place.
It looks now like the city of Kherson is poised for the kind of destruction we witnessed in Mariupol, no matter what the outcome.
Crimea apart, are those small eastern regions (compared to the size of Ukraine as a whole) worth the gigantic cost in finance & resources?
Have you forgotten the history of appeasement?
I'm not suggesting appeasement - in fact I'm not suggesting anything, I really don't know, but there has to come a point where emotion needs to be tempered with intelligence & some form of dialogue & maybe arbitration has to take place.
It looks now like the city of Kherson is poised for the kind of destruction we witnessed in Mariupol, no matter what the outcome.
Crimea apart, are those small eastern regions (compared to the size of Ukraine as a whole) worth the gigantic cost in finance & resources?
steg: No I don't support landgrabs at all, but it's a rather complicated region historically. Do you know anything about it? you could try here if you want to find out;
Amazon.co.uk User Recommendation
Amazon.co.uk User Recommendation