The Pentagon has expressed no concern regarding the advance of Ukrainian forces in Russia’s Kursk Oblast, the Pentagon’s press service reports.

Source: European Pravda, citing Sabrina Singh, Deputy Spokesperson for the Pentagon

Details: “No, because at the end of the day, Ukraine is fighting for its sovereign territory that its neighbour invaded. So, if we want to de-escalate tensions, as we’ve said from the beginning, the best way to do that is Putin can make that decision today to withdraw troops from Ukraine,” Singh stated, when asked about the potential escalation of tensions due to Ukrainian forces entering Kursk Oblast

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    -114 months ago

    Yeah, that’s the elephant in the room. Also, am I crazy or is getting Ukraine nuclear missiles the answer to this artificial power imbalance…? Like, I know no NATO country can just pack and ship Ukraine nukes, but… If we provide them aid to defend their country and they saw fit to somehow purchase nuclear warheads and put them on their missiles… Wouldn’t that be a good thing?

    They’re now a stable, mature, corruption-free country. If they publicly and loudly announced: “We now have nuclear missiles, and they’re aimed at Moscow and the homes of everyone in the Kremlin, deal with it.”

    I’m definitely not one for nuclear proliferation, but that would get rid of Russia’s “trump” card and might be the only way they back down…

    • @Samsonreturns
      link
      English
      474 months ago

      You do know that Ukraine willingly dismantled its nuclear arsenal? And I would hardly call their country corruption-free, but that’s a different topic altogether. I think this is why it is so important for NATO to be the backbone of the Ukrainian defense efforts, as they were the voices encouraging them to rid themselves of nuclear weapons.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        574 months ago

        Ukraine willingly dismantled its nuclear arsenal

        In exchange for assurances that Russia wouldn’t invade them. They won’t make that mistake again. And it’s not just me, NATO and organizations around the world have vouched for Ukraine’s continuing efforts to root out and remove corruption.

        • Skua
          link
          fedilink
          -14 months ago

          There is the issue that at the time, Ukraine had absolutely no ability to actually pay to maintain a nuclear arsenal. Getting security agreements instead was a sensible thing to do, it just turns out that the ones they got weren’t strong enough

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
            link
            fedilink
            English
            94 months ago

            Ukraine had absolutely no ability to actually pay to maintain a nuclear arsenal.

            And Russia does? At least they’d have the “what if one of them still works” card that the Russians are playing.

            • @Wispy2891
              link
              English
              44 months ago

              Theoretically yes, although that would mean less yachts for oligarchs, so maybe some maintenance might be neglected or skipped

              • @CheeseNoodle
                link
                English
                14 months ago

                Not really, Russia spends about as much on its arsenal as the UK while having orders of magnitude more warheads to maintain. Either they have help from the magic nuclear maintenance faeries or only a small portion of their arsenal is still functional.

            • Skua
              link
              fedilink
              34 months ago

              Russia’s GDP and GDP per capita have both been a lot higher than Ukraine’s in the entire post-Soviet period. Usually about two to three times higher per capita and five to ten times bigger overall. Post-Soviet Russia hasn’t been particularly prosperous, but it has a large population and oil money. It was definitely much more able to pay for it than Ukraine.

              • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
                link
                fedilink
                English
                24 months ago

                All I’m saying is that if they kept some, they could maintain some ambiguity whether they were maintaining them or not, potentially deterring the current invasion. It’s not like Russia has money to spare either, we’re taking them at their word that they have a functioning nuclear arsenal.

                With how the current invasion is going, I doubt that they know for certain. But let’s be honest, that uncertainty is the only thing keeping US F-22s out of Moscow’s skies right now.

                • Skua
                  link
                  fedilink
                  34 months ago

                  I agree it would have been better for them with the benefit of hindsight. My point is more that the decision that they did make was a pretty rational one at the time

                  • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    24 months ago

                    Yeah, I get that and I agree. Everyone thought Russia will do what’s good for Russia, and not this.

      • @Darkard
        link
        English
        234 months ago

        Not only got rid of their nukes, but in agreement with Russia that that their territory would be respected.

        The nukes were their protection from Russia, and Russia stabbed them in the back after they got rid of them. Russia used the “NATO expansion” excuse, among others, as a reason to invade when it was Europe who worked to de-nuke Ukraine in the first place.