Are we risking nuclear war by supporting Ukraine?

Ғылым және технология

With Naval War College Historian Sarah C.M. Paine
Full video: • Sarah C. M. Paine - WW...
Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
Spotify: open.spotify.com/episode/073V...
Transcript: www.dwarkeshpatel.com/p/sarah...

Пікірлер: 910

  • @bradjohnson4787
    @bradjohnson4787Ай бұрын

    You can't appease a bully intent on grabbing stuff when they think someone's weak!

  • @5353Jumper

    @5353Jumper

    Ай бұрын

    We gave Hitler half of Czechoslovakia, and that did not "appease" the Nazi's very long.

  • @r.lewisblake7793

    @r.lewisblake7793

    Ай бұрын

    @@5353Jumper We?

  • @isn0t42

    @isn0t42

    Ай бұрын

    You push someone against the wall and call "appeasement" allowing them to breath. And when they punch you in the face, you call them a "bully". GTFO.

  • @Leto2ndAtreides

    @Leto2ndAtreides

    Ай бұрын

    You may not want to appease one, but you also don't want to actively provoke one. One needs some awareness of how the other side is processing the world. You could hardly say that the US was being delusional during the Cuban Missile Crisis... It's not worth it to let your enemies gain that kind of position.

  • @bradjohnson4787

    @bradjohnson4787

    Ай бұрын

    Russian?

  • @AlessandroMarcolin
    @AlessandroMarcolinАй бұрын

    This lady is fantastic, I didn't know anything about her 'till a couple of days ago. I would want her as my advisor of foreign policy if I was the President of the US

  • @jku72
    @jku72Ай бұрын

    One can argue that appeasement is more likely to cause a war than showing strength. Ask Neveile Chamberlain about what a signed peace agreement by letting an authoritarian government have its way was worth.

  • @rossicourvosi218

    @rossicourvosi218

    Ай бұрын

    Chamberlain knew a war was happening he just brought Britain more time to ready up

  • @madarah8533

    @madarah8533

    Ай бұрын

    @@rossicourvosi218 lol thats not at all what happend

  • @rossicourvosi218

    @rossicourvosi218

    Ай бұрын

    @@madarah8533 read his biography

  • @stevechance150

    @stevechance150

    Ай бұрын

    If Russia takes Ukraine, Putin will move on Poland. Poland has bombers that can reach Moscow. How will Poland respond to Russian troops crossing into Poland?

  • @andrewbachman698

    @andrewbachman698

    Ай бұрын

    Chamberlain was in a much more severe bind than people realize. 1. Britain wasn’t ready for all out war(Germany wasn’t either but they were ahead of Britain) and more importantly the Dominions would not support War. Canada was lukewarm at best, so they may not join, and S. Africa and Australia were completely opposed(see Gallipoli if you want to know why). So Chamberlain went to the peace talks with his hands tied behind his back he could be the PM that appeased Hitler or the PM that shattered the British Empire. He chose the former.

  • @mr.bisley2748
    @mr.bisley2748Ай бұрын

    2 reasons why Putin will not use nukes 1. The few allies he has will run for the hills, self preservation kicks in 2. Everyone in the chain of command will become a threat. They all have family.

  • @graemesydney38

    @graemesydney38

    Ай бұрын

    The question is not 'will Putin use nukes' (he probably would rather than lose), the question is 'will the officers of the nuke force follows such an order' (knowing the meaning of M.A.D. for them, their families and Russia).

  • @dannycorsaro546

    @dannycorsaro546

    24 күн бұрын

    Really 😂😂😂

  • @ericjorgensen6425

    @ericjorgensen6425

    12 күн бұрын

    3. He has no nukes. His weapons are many decades old, maintained by an absolutely corrupt military. Image you are a corrupt general.. how much of the maintenance money goes into maintenance on weapons that are never supposed to be fired?

  • @johncronin7875

    @johncronin7875

    2 күн бұрын

    @@dannycorsaro546really

  • @dannycorsaro546

    @dannycorsaro546

    2 күн бұрын

    @@johncronin7875 yes really. The elites could care less about us plebs

  • @jonserrander3735
    @jonserrander37358 ай бұрын

    Spot on. Supporting Ukraine is the most sensible thing to do both strategically, economically and morally. Pennies on the dollar and much better effect than any campaign during the war on terror.

  • @JohnDoe-ix4kx

    @JohnDoe-ix4kx

    8 ай бұрын

    Estimated deaths of 500000+, 115 Billion dollars spent so far and you say pennies on the dollar? Holy fuck man nothing about this is sensible, and that's assuming that just like the war on terror which was a massive failure that this campaign won't be one too.

  • @atishayritulpatwa

    @atishayritulpatwa

    Ай бұрын

    Better? Current every missle that is send to Ukraine is a missle that cannot be used in Taiwan. And Ukraine is a country that will never in future recover even if they somehow take Donbas back. Their demographics will never work, and too many have left Ukraine already.

  • @mattgriewahn8554

    @mattgriewahn8554

    Ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@atishayritulpatwawe can build more missiles and frankly, there’s no way for china to really have a successful invasion to get a toe hold on the island in the next 10 years. And Taiwan has a vested interest in repelling a Chinese invasion.

  • @atishayritulpatwa

    @atishayritulpatwa

    Ай бұрын

    @@mattgriewahn8554 missiles are not 1939 tanks, they can’t be build within a day. Russian took two years to ramp up their production, and Americans would take the same. And Americans have not started to ramp up their production.

  • @hereLiesThisTroper

    @hereLiesThisTroper

    Ай бұрын

    Pennies on the dollar. The most entitled statement an American could ever say. In your smugness, you just implied that the lives of Ukrainian soldiers are worth pennies to you.

  • @swift_learn
    @swift_learnАй бұрын

    Go ask the people in eastern Europe if their families enjoyed the gulags.

  • @faizanrana2998

    @faizanrana2998

    17 күн бұрын

    Poolags

  • @alfredzig2035
    @alfredzig2035Ай бұрын

    This woman absolutely understands her stuff.

  • @chrismiller5198

    @chrismiller5198

    23 күн бұрын

    I agree that we shouldn't tiptoe around Putin's personal hangups about the West and America.

  • @xxyyzzplants131

    @xxyyzzplants131

    5 күн бұрын

    maybe that's why she teaches at the War College.

  • @lagoonlane
    @lagoonlaneАй бұрын

    We lived with nuclear weapons for decades.

  • @antonoko

    @antonoko

    Ай бұрын

    There has never been a nuclear power involved in an existential war until now.

  • @infrared337

    @infrared337

    Ай бұрын

    @@antonoko Cold War era proxy wars ring any bell to you? Korean War? Vietnam? No?

  • @TDH_1962

    @TDH_1962

    Ай бұрын

    @@infrared337 No. None of those conflicts were existential for either nuclear power

  • @infrared337

    @infrared337

    Ай бұрын

    @@TDH_1962 ah you meant to the nuclear power? Ok, Cuba maybe? I don't think Ukraine being Independent from Russia poses existential threat to Russia. And if it does, that is their own internal problem.

  • @infrared337

    @infrared337

    Ай бұрын

    @@TDH_1962 yes another one believing groups of Russian speaking Ukrainians magically pulled out army worth of tanks and assault rifles to start a rebellion against Ukraine with no help from Russian army direct involvement. You are a lost cause.

  • @RanknFileX.192
    @RanknFileX.192Ай бұрын

    I love how Professor Paine dismisses "stupid," because, "you write off their understanding." WOW, great comment!!! Most people have a logic for their behaviour. It need not make sense to most, but there is a logic/reason/understanding in their mind, disorganized as it may be. It is "logical" from their half-assed perspective! It may be twisted, short sighted or just plain hubris, but it is a reasonable position from their POV. We can disagree, think they're, "nuts," but it is logical from their perspective. Thanks for the insight, Prof. Paine and Darkwesh! 😊

  • @kevinharrigan2727
    @kevinharrigan2727Ай бұрын

    My girlfriends dad is from Belarus. He fled as soon as the Soviet Union fell, and he has given me a much greater appreciation for the tenacity and sheer grit of our Eastern European brothers, a grit I haven’t seen in very many demographics of traditional Western peoples and a grit I think we should absolutely appreciate here in America and the rest of the West. I would happily, happily fight alongside them if war were to break out. I hope Ukraine wins this war, they’ve proven themselves to be incredibly opposed to Russian aggression and have shown their willingness to fight and figure out creative solutions to adapt to the modern battlefield, and I hope we can continue to support them.

  • @TDH_1962

    @TDH_1962

    Ай бұрын

    War has broken out... And I hear Ukraine is desperate for recruits. Do it. Or are you just a blowhard coward?

  • @marcob.7801

    @marcob.7801

    Ай бұрын

    Right on brother! Slava Ukraine!

  • @zivaradlovacki2666

    @zivaradlovacki2666

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@marcob.7801bandera salute suits ya. Keep it up.

  • @zivaradlovacki2666

    @zivaradlovacki2666

    Ай бұрын

    You should go and fight now. Why wait? Quick wile your life is still worth 1 dollar and Ukrainian 1 penny. Does it feel good your life is worth that much more?

  • @marcob.7801

    @marcob.7801

    Ай бұрын

    @@zivaradlovacki2666 It's a turn of phrase! Anyone with a sane mind, an understanding of greedy human nature and even a remote knowledge of pre and post WW2 era history does not want Ukraine to founder. When she says "pennies on the dollar"...she is referring to the MOST pragmatic and logical solution to Ukraine's ( and, IMHO, the world's)....immediate need! Don't take everything so literally! Think realistically, not ideologically. In essence, grow up!

  • @__scottvg
    @__scottvgАй бұрын

    “Starvation in the 21st century? How DID you do it?” 😂

  • @zivaradlovacki2666

    @zivaradlovacki2666

    Ай бұрын

    Well, how did western countries bring global south to starvation going in to 21 century, for hundreds of years now?

  • @rayray0313

    @rayray0313

    28 күн бұрын

    The way she said it lol😂

  • @zivaradlovacki2666

    @zivaradlovacki2666

    28 күн бұрын

    @@rayray0313 you mean how did global west put great chunk of global south into powerty for centuries to this day?

  • @zivaradlovacki2666

    @zivaradlovacki2666

    28 күн бұрын

    @@rayray0313 how did 20% of global population (west) put 80% of global population( south) in poverty for hundreds of years to this day?

  • @shitsmells

    @shitsmells

    27 күн бұрын

    @@zivaradlovacki2666 we found you in poverty, developed the industrial revolution which enriched us, then shared those technologies with the rest of the world who are struggling to catch up due to endemic corruption, bad civics and bad ethics.

  • @carlanderson7618
    @carlanderson7618Ай бұрын

    The Ukraine is this centuries Sudetenland. Surrendering the Ukraine will only lead to more conflict not less. Just as the Munich Betrayal of 1938/39 did not lead to peace but war.

  • @cedricvogt2576

    @cedricvogt2576

    Ай бұрын

    wroong...Putin is not Hitler...

  • @carlanderson7618

    @carlanderson7618

    Ай бұрын

    @@cedricvogt2576 Enough similarities to make the comparison. Hitler made the excuse for taking Sudetenland to protect ethnic Germans , Putin claims to want to protect ethnic Russians in Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia. Hitler had political opponents killed or put into concentration camps, Putin has political opponents killed or put into Gulags, Hitler wanted and empire, Putin wants to re-establish one. Hitler was diagnosed as a psychopath, so is Putin. Only difference is the political ideology they use to commit their crimes, like Hitler and Stalin were more similar than different. In reality NAZI fascism and communism are two sides of the same coin.

  • @cedricvogt2576

    @cedricvogt2576

    Ай бұрын

    @@carlanderson7618 dont be so intellectually lazy. Hitler was a mad man who did not last longer than a decade to launch a huge world war. Putin on the other hand is widely regarded to be one of the best politicians (by Ray Dalio etc.)… he is in charge for decades and did not have any plans to launch a war, he wanted the same kind of military operation that worked in Georgia in 2008. He doesnt even have the ressources to conquer Ukraine, how should he attack more countries? Just fear mongering out of nonsense.

  • @Notascousebird

    @Notascousebird

    Ай бұрын

    It’s just Ukraine !

  • @elibecker8848

    @elibecker8848

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@carlanderson7618 one major difference is that Nazi Germany was a superpower, who were able to defeat Poland and France in a matter of weeks, while Putin hasn't been able to defeat Ukraine in over two years and counting.

  • @Hexanitrobenzene
    @Hexanitrobenzene8 ай бұрын

    Great guest, great question. However, I have some criticism about form. I understand the wish to shorten video, but having cuts mid-sentence just breaks the flow and makes the content more difficult to understand. Please don't cater to the mainstream mentality of social media.

  • @forbeginnersandbeyond6089

    @forbeginnersandbeyond6089

    Ай бұрын

    This interview is over 1 hour long without interruptions nor obvious edits. Search for it in KZread. This clip is a snippet of that interview.

  • @user-ie1tz5rm8x

    @user-ie1tz5rm8x

    Ай бұрын

    Yup and shes a loaded pistol...its pretty sharp a-z

  • @drewyoung2102
    @drewyoung210218 күн бұрын

    I worked with various engineers and technical people from former East Germany. Some were fully indoctrinated and could not change and some left. No one every had anything good to say about soviets.

  • @markbanash921
    @markbanash921Ай бұрын

    "It's a big galaxy and it's full of people who don't like the Klingons" - Capt. Kirk, "Errand of Mercy"

  • @squireson
    @squiresonАй бұрын

    No, no, what Russia has *_described_* as provocation doesn't mean that they see it that way. They react to actions by the West *as deterrence* _that they don't want._

  • @MikMoen
    @MikMoenАй бұрын

    American Professor: "Oh, no one's marching on Moscow." Poland: "Why not?"

  • @ajez597

    @ajez597

    Ай бұрын

    I've heard a Polish military brass say in a interview that their doctrine against Russia is not only defend poland but attack Russia.

  • @Komradenter

    @Komradenter

    Ай бұрын

    @@ajez597 yeah after repelling Russian invasion, that makes sense.

  • @V45194

    @V45194

    8 күн бұрын

    Despite Putin's hysterical squealing about "the collective West," no one really wants Russia to cease to exist. That absolutely is not what this war is about, despite %ucker Carslon and the other paid propagandists' untiring efforts to present it as such to their semi-literate totalitarian-minded audiences: retirees in rural Russia, a few fringe neonazi parties across Europe and of course the MAGA "I love the poorly educated" cult in America. No, this war is simply about the civilized world finally putting a stop to a deranged tyrant's brutal 19th-century imperialism. Nothing more and nothing less. Russia already is *quite literally the biggest empire on Earth!* Well, let them have it and do soul searching... I hear the Russian soul is great - the question is, will the Russians themselves someday find it?

  • @jackpaperhands
    @jackpaperhandsАй бұрын

    this lady is a legend

  • @jjhoughton2812

    @jjhoughton2812

    Ай бұрын

    To ?

  • @moiseshuerta3984

    @moiseshuerta3984

    Ай бұрын

    She's a a hack.

  • @victorgalloway9770

    @victorgalloway9770

    Ай бұрын

    Facts she is 💯

  • @cl5619

    @cl5619

    Ай бұрын

    She seems to be a neo con supplying the rationale for US interventions

  • @nephalynzit

    @nephalynzit

    8 күн бұрын

    She is 100% propagandist

  • @johnwalsh4857
    @johnwalsh4857Ай бұрын

    I love Sarah Paine's books . BIG FAN

  • @konstantingruenwald185
    @konstantingruenwald185Ай бұрын

    This lady is incredibly brilliant. I could listen to her talk for hours and hours.

  • @traitretrudeau2367

    @traitretrudeau2367

    19 күн бұрын

    that the problem, people talking alone without getting counter by anyone, watch debates, not monologues

  • @konstantingruenwald185

    @konstantingruenwald185

    19 күн бұрын

    ​@@traitretrudeau2367 You’re right, no one should ever watch anything other than debates. I apologize. Next time I’ll be sure to check with you and get your approval before I watch anything else.

  • @101wormwood
    @101wormwoodАй бұрын

    youve got starving in the 21st century..., how did you do it? (n.korea) This woman is my hero. 5:00

  • @nunterz
    @nunterzАй бұрын

    Thank you for not wanting to sell us out (again). An Eastern European.

  • @hudooguru2
    @hudooguru2Ай бұрын

    Great exchange. Sarah is the real deal.

  • @grantsapain
    @grantsapainАй бұрын

    That's what Russia wants us to think.

  • @michaeldonnelly6747
    @michaeldonnelly6747Ай бұрын

    I like this woman!

  • @jacobasselta2419

    @jacobasselta2419

    Ай бұрын

    Really, ask this question is it in Americas best interest to defend one dictatorship the size of Texas (Ukraine) if it means destabilizing a continent sized power (Russia) into civil war. Look how much the Syrian civil war and infighting in Iraq after our intervention in those countries, or us meddling in Iran before the revolution has upset the middle east. Do we really want an unstable Russia? Is another Russian revolution/or civil war in our interest? How radical will they become after another round of revolution/civil war, look how the treaty of Versailles (no one marched into Berlin) which was in modern day terms just sanctions and guilt led to Nazi Germany and the evils they unleashed upon humanity. In a post communist Russian age with an ever present threat of communist China, is it really smart to push Russia into Chinas arms and into their camp. Or, is it wiser to set clear boundaries with but treat Russia as an equal to work together in the future in surrounding China and North Korea with Western states. Or should we risk a destabilized Russia which will inevitably cause more destabilizing in surrounding areas due to their size and influence over Ukraine which is not a real democracy and poses no benefit to the American order. Just a thought.

  • @r.lewisblake7793

    @r.lewisblake7793

    Ай бұрын

    @@jacobasselta2419 Think harder. You first attempt (ever?) Is sorely lacking in intelligence. Hopefully, (for all concerned) if you keep trying, you may get it one day. Can’t debunk each and every one of your Phuhuqed up beyond belief assumptions, because,…….they are without basis in reality. But your valiant effort to make them seem correct,……yeah, that failed too. Your caretaker must be so……🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @aryzen2781

    @aryzen2781

    Ай бұрын

    @@jacobasselta2419 yes

  • @yeetman4953

    @yeetman4953

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jacobasselta2419i stopped readi g when you said china was communist, get your shit together.

  • @yeetman4953

    @yeetman4953

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jacobasselta2419ukraine is still a democracy.

  • @placebo5466
    @placebo5466Ай бұрын

    "Well, let's look at N. Korea. A country that has starvation in the 21st century. How did, you do it?" That made me chuckle.

  • @rustywater3219
    @rustywater3219Ай бұрын

    Are russian nukes even still able to go off? Have they been keeping up with maintenance or are they like the rest of their military?

  • @SkywalkerPaul

    @SkywalkerPaul

    Ай бұрын

    Didn't you watch the last nuclear triad test Russia conducted?

  • @Victor-ov7hw

    @Victor-ov7hw

    Ай бұрын

    You really want to find out?

  • @sH-ed5yf

    @sH-ed5yf

    Ай бұрын

    Most of them yes. Are the russian ones cspable

  • @damonedrington3453

    @damonedrington3453

    Ай бұрын

    To be fair, I’d assume that’s one of the few things they genuinely try to maintain

  • @jamesw1659

    @jamesw1659

    Ай бұрын

    @@SkywalkerPaulthat just means they could make a new bomb…it doesn’t really say anything about the thousands of old ones in inventory.

  • @marcob.7801
    @marcob.7801Ай бұрын

    What is the title of her book????

  • @aSSGoblin1488
    @aSSGoblin1488Ай бұрын

    we may be risking nuke war but its russia who started this risk

  • @pomka24

    @pomka24

    Ай бұрын

    in general, the West has always been the cause of wars, and the United States used nuclear weapons in Japan, and also planned to use them in Korea and Vietnam, but pressure from the Soviets stopped them 🤫

  • @moiseshuerta3984

    @moiseshuerta3984

    Ай бұрын

    Who cares who started it? Ukraine definitely aint worth a nuclear holocaust.

  • @antonoko

    @antonoko

    Ай бұрын

    Right, moral victories like this will surely matter when everything's turned to dust.

  • @ABanRocks

    @ABanRocks

    Ай бұрын

    US started this by trying to.get Ukraine to join NATO

  • @Lurreable
    @LurreableАй бұрын

    "You were given the choice between war and dishonour. You chose dishonour, and you will have war." - Winston Churchill on Chamberlain appeasing Hitler, before WW2

  • @keithrowell653
    @keithrowell65324 күн бұрын

    When would Hitler have stopped asking for more if he had always been given what he wanted?

  • @joedavis1404
    @joedavis1404Ай бұрын

    Sarah C. M. Paine, thank you for your clear insight.

  • @mackiej
    @mackiej8 ай бұрын

    The impact of using a nuke on global nuclear arms proliferation is a very important point.

  • @micskovbon5738

    @micskovbon5738

    Ай бұрын

    No its not, only in propaganda use.

  • @esteemedyams
    @esteemedyamsАй бұрын

    Thank you, this is 100% spot on and needs to be said and heard over and over until we don't have any more 'Marjorie Traitor Green' type characters in the world.

  • @jamesw1659

    @jamesw1659

    Ай бұрын

    Because Marjorie Taylor Green disagrees with you doesn’t make her a traitor. A lot of people are asking the same questions she is, and I don’t see why that isn’t legit. The word “traitor” is being overused a lot today, sort of like “racist”. Eventually, if it keeps up, it will become meaningless…

  • @marcob.7801

    @marcob.7801

    Ай бұрын

    t is

  • @docbradleydc

    @docbradleydc

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jamesw1659 It goes a bit beyond simple disagreement. She called for the execution of Democrat politicians and a national divorce.

  • @XerxesDotiwalla
    @XerxesDotiwalla8 ай бұрын

    Wait, where is the answer to the question about nuclear war?

  • @DSan-kl2yc

    @DSan-kl2yc

    Ай бұрын

    That we don't decide how Russians interpret things. And it wouldn't be right to deem eastern Europeans worthless, and sacrifice them for it. Also that it's unlikely.

  • @parkerhanson4009
    @parkerhanson4009Ай бұрын

    Brilliant! Will be watching more S.C.P.

  • @silentblackhole
    @silentblackholeАй бұрын

    This should be required viewing for anyone taking part in the future of ukraine, yes this includes leaders in the USA

  • @krakhedd
    @krakheddАй бұрын

    I disagree w/ Sarah that "calling somebody stupid is writing off their reasoning" as why Putin won't use nukes. I think he will and I agree w/ Dwarkesh that we cannot simply believe he won't because *WE* fail to conceive a strategic return if *WE* were in his shoes. THIS IS ALSO NOT WARRANT TO LET HIM HAVE WHAT HE WANTS, but to clarify and illustrate a serious mistake we often make in the West: We try to put others into our own understanding, rather than vice-versa

  • @lightforce4604

    @lightforce4604

    Ай бұрын

    The most stupid implication she made is that Russia is going towards North Korea. Which is just sheer decietful propaganda with someone from her qualification.

  • @Uller1967

    @Uller1967

    25 күн бұрын

    @@lightforce4604 Is Russia more or less authoritarian now than they were 15 years ago? Is Russia more or less isolated now than they were 15 years ago? I think that's what she is referring to when she said Russia is going towards N Korea.

  • @V45194

    @V45194

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@@lightforce4604 I mean, who is supplying the Kremlin gnome with arms these days, aside from the Ayatollah? Why, Fat Kim, of course!

  • @sammiekay08
    @sammiekay0818 күн бұрын

    Fascinating interview. I appreciate her expertise and knowledge on these topics. Thanks for all of your hard work putting this together!

  • @stevenroberts5893
    @stevenroberts5893Ай бұрын

    Wow love to hear her !!!!!

  • @peterkratoska4524
    @peterkratoska4524Ай бұрын

    Whenever someone states that the West provoked Russia by expanding Nato I ask them how they would like living in a buffer state. I did, I still recall Operation Danube when I was a kid in 68 when Russia and the rest of the Warsaw Pact marched into my country with 800,000 troops because the Kremlin didn't like the shift towards a bit of freedom from the Czech govt. Hungary in 56, Poland, the Baltic countries everyone joined as soon as they possibly could. I must say Sarah Paine is really well informed on the topic and the biggest takeway is that while the West has learned that this kind of war is completely unproductive and everyone ends up worse off (this was shown in 1918, and 45) it is so much better for everyone to grow and trade and work together. Its not like the medieval wars where you take over land and end up with serfs who will give you the wealth. So much of the wealth nowadays is not in land but in the people. If Russia were to invade California and take Cupertino and Apple hq they would not gain much because the people would just leave, if Apple is worth some 2.8trillion it is in the people that work in it - not the land. So Russia gaining mostly destroyed and largely de-populated parts of eastern Ukraine- their land bridge to Crimea but at what cost. It has become an international pariah, it's lost its largest customer the EU for much of its natural gas (China will never pay as much and it would take a long time to build pipelines to ship to China. It's also lost a lot of young talented people with money who fled during the first year, not to mention a lot of young men who are dying or getting disabled - for a country with a demographic disaster. Also a GDP of 1.5trillion, less than Italy or Canada. As Sarah points out the business laws in Russia not only make it hard to run a business - it is intentionally set up that way so that at any given time the klepto state could control or seize the business. There is an issue with one man dictator ship with no real succession - and as anyone has seen the Death of Stalin - there is often chaos and a major turnaround when the leader dies. And there is no comfortable retirement for Putin. (Or for that matter Xi Jinping).

  • @lightforce4604

    @lightforce4604

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah no one would like to stay in a buffer state perhaps, you may not even like Putin or Russia; but NATO have always been provacateur supreme. Just ask the entire Eastern Hermisphere. There is a reason why most people in the Eastern hemsiphere are more sympathetic towards Russia.

  • @dannycorsaro546

    @dannycorsaro546

    24 күн бұрын

    Really? We have the biggest war mongering criminals in the world.

  • @vitorlopes2064

    @vitorlopes2064

    12 күн бұрын

    Imagine russian nukes in Mexico. How would US react?? Nato should have been dissolved alongside the soviet union. US withdraw from 2 major missile agreements unilateraly. The Russians are freaking out

  • @peterkratoska4524

    @peterkratoska4524

    12 күн бұрын

    @@vitorlopes2064 hey the guy who gave Nato its purpose is Putin himself. Even made Sweden and Finland join. See its nothing to do with US expansionism, every one who wanted to join Nato did so willingly the first chance they could. Everyone of those countries including mine had been invaded or occupied by Russia in the past.

  • @vitorlopes2064

    @vitorlopes2064

    11 күн бұрын

    @@peterkratoska4524 after the fall of the soviet union NATo became just a big US weapons sale plattform and instrument of control. Lets not forget what nato did in the middle east and yogoslavia… was it ” defensive”?

  • @eckhardt76
    @eckhardt76Ай бұрын

    Protect this woman at all costs ! God bless her.

  • @rformetoknow479
    @rformetoknow479Ай бұрын

    If we ignored Hitler and Japan at the time what would the world look like today?

  • @AtriadGamasekav

    @AtriadGamasekav

    Ай бұрын

    But you would have ignored both hitler and Japan if they hadn’t attacked you directly. I don’t have illusions in western democracy. They will sacrifice us here in Ukraine if they believe that Russia will stop here and won’t go any further.

  • @stuka97
    @stuka97Ай бұрын

    So What! You can not appease the aggressor they only respect one thing and that's the possibility of there own destruction.

  • @ruslanustiuhov5510
    @ruslanustiuhov5510Ай бұрын

    I like this phrase “Pennies on the dollar”. That is how human lives cost right now.

  • @sergiyrospysdiyenko6224
    @sergiyrospysdiyenko6224Ай бұрын

    When US was at war with Vietnam, Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, no one asked this question?!

  • @thebadstation8416

    @thebadstation8416

    Ай бұрын

    America did no go to war with afghanistan. They were fighting terrorists im the country of afghanist which the country supported. Same thing in syria. America did go to war with iraq which is true and i will admit did not so good things.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    False equivalence. 1. American war in vietnam is equivalent to russian assitance to syrian regime. 2. American war in afghanistan - 9/11 was a response to an attack. 3. American war with iraq- sadam started it with war on neighbours who were american allies. This narrative is the "muah murica bad" which removes agency on other parties in the world stage (racism of low espectations).

  • @philognosis6409

    @philognosis6409

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@puraLusaKuwait did actually steal 50 Billion in oil from sovereign territory of Iraq and the United States gave the green light before Saddam attacked. But later the invasion in the new millennium was on knowingly false pretenses and they prevented Antibiotics for reaching Iraq. Lately United States has pretended that just crazy people in Yemen are attacking US shipping. When you deliberately create a famine by preventing imports of grain properly paid for to feed civilians people tend to hate you. Oh and preventing insecticide for the purpose of not having a plague of locusts was a nice touch.

  • @cathulionetharn5139

    @cathulionetharn5139

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@puraLusa 1.not really, it was more like supporting british in the american war for independence Vietnam was a colony of France, imperialist France, we-consider-your-culture-and-religion-inferior-and-will-civilize-you-by-force France, your-resources-are-ours France, it was also really badly done, the guy americans put in charge of southern vietnam was a catholic monk who had no desire or drive for leadership, and was a symbol of the forced conversion of the people to christianity. Nothern Vietnam became communist because capitalists were fighting them and communists were willing to support them, not the other way around. 2.taliban had nothing to do with 9/11, in fact similarly to the vietnamese, the taliban formed to oppose soviet occupation of afghanistan, and to them (and many afghani) americans were just another foreign empire invading their homeland and forcing their values and culture on them, also: here we built your village a well, surely that makes up for a third of it being destroyed by our bombing runs? Also the war in Syria? it is one thing to fight terrorists, it is another to have an entire military base sit there and watch as an ancient city full of history and culture dating back well before Christ, is being bombed by the terrorist you are supposed to fight until eventually the Syrian military is forced to abandon it, to those very terrorists you are supposed to fight, all the while a conversation leaks, where one the generals in charge of the war says something along the lines of: let's see if this forces the syrian government to the negotiating table. Which by the way, pick a side, is the Syrian government a brutal regime with no care for it's people and supposedly commits genocide on them, or are they going to accept american terms (because that is what negotiation means let's be frank) to save their people Let's not forget that Isis is destroyed, Trump ordered the pentagon generals to withdraw from Syria (which they PRETENDED to do, but not really, to keep the troops there until Biden came in) where a third of the country is occupied, oh look, 100% of the oil fields in Syria are in that occupied region, and an American company is drilling the oil I have this sinking feeling if I read more into the Iraq war I would find out it was nowhere near as black and white either

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    @@cathulionetharn5139 have no pacience for a long essay based on a false permisse. Vietnam - france had left - had a democratic gov in the south and a commie one in the north - south asked usa for help. Syria - france had left - socialist gov in southwest - several factions all over (civil war) - asked russia for help. So, my example fits perfectly and doesn't need false permisse and mental ginmastics.

  • @davidahlstrom7533
    @davidahlstrom753314 сағат бұрын

    Outstanding historian, Sarah C.M. Paine, professor of strategy and policy at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. She really put in her time learning China and Chinese, Russian, East Asian history, and even Latin America (as an undergrad). Really 'paid her dues' as we say in academia. Check out her books, especially on China, Japan, and Russia -- all excellent. She understands the ground level subtleties of (and in) China especially, as few grand strategists understand. Very good KZread videos also.

  • @seanbrennan5192
    @seanbrennan5192Ай бұрын

    Protect this woman at all costs!

  • @Btdenn123
    @Btdenn123Ай бұрын

    This really ignores 2014 to the day Russia invaded. She was probably shocked Russia invaded based on how she's reasoning. Choosing standard of living over culture is how Americans think..... it's not necessarily the priorities of other countries/cultures/people.

  • @rbarnes4076

    @rbarnes4076

    Ай бұрын

    Seriously? She described Russian power dynamics VERY accurately.. she does it EVERY time she talks about how Eastern Europe has essentially been driven into the arms of Nato because of past Russian aggression. Russian behavior both recently and in the past is proof they are not to be trusted. Don't confuse Russian maskirova with reality. I can absolutely guarantee that Ms. Paine doesn't confuse those two. How you missed this is well beyond me.

  • @2639theboss

    @2639theboss

    Ай бұрын

    It wasn't an American strategy? It was a German one? It even has a name, Wandel durch Handel. I love how stupid people think it's a uniquely American thing to be domestically selfish, or oblivious to differences in cultural attitudes or priorities.

  • @5353Jumper

    @5353Jumper

    Ай бұрын

    Well, not necessarily the priority for LEADERS of other counties.

  • @mikedeck8381

    @mikedeck8381

    Ай бұрын

    Truth be told people in Eastern Europe have despised the Russians for centuries, they've fought loads of wars over the centuries. It really doesn't have anything to do with the US and we need to be careful about getting involved but that ship has sailed. What this war is really about is the Russian oil, natural gas as well as the resources of Central Asia. From what I see Russia is winning the economic war and the US position isn't really feasible in the long run. Keeping Eastern European countries as vassal states has no economy to it for the US or them. It makes sense for Western Europe but they don't have the resources to support them.

  • @Kevin-vx8qe

    @Kevin-vx8qe

    Ай бұрын

    Do you really think ordinary russians or Chinese to choose the priorities of their governments?

  • @StormyJoeonthego
    @StormyJoeonthegoАй бұрын

    get the clown with the Beard to shut up and listen . he might actually learn something from this genius grandma. i love her . boy is she calling it or what. incredible lady !

  • @pcopeland15
    @pcopeland15Ай бұрын

    Listen to the people affected. Thank you. Not doing so is by definition imperialism. Lines on maps drawn by outsiders.

  • @cl5619

    @cl5619

    Ай бұрын

    😅 It’s always the 1930s before World War Two for you global intervenionalists. We are always at risk of being next Neveile Chamberlain if we don’t intervene. The adversary is always the next Evil Super Villain. (20 years ago it was Saddam Husain; today it’s Putin) The Evil Super Villain is always harboring super evil plans to take over the world or something. And we American citizens are always on the hook to pay for it.

  • @Fluster666
    @Fluster666Ай бұрын

    Who cut this?

  • @cl5619

    @cl5619

    Ай бұрын

    No

  • @cb2291
    @cb2291Ай бұрын

    If India was getting invaded by Chinese or Russians then Dwarkesh would be singing a different tune lmao

  • @stc2828

    @stc2828

    Ай бұрын

    lol it’s called border dispute, Chinese think India is invading their land 😅

  • @AnotherComment-rl6fv

    @AnotherComment-rl6fv

    Ай бұрын

    this lady needs to have a self reflection, US has been trying to be a continental empire, from presence and bases in ME, SEA, Latin America and EU, printing dollars.

  • @dillamadukes21

    @dillamadukes21

    Ай бұрын

    @@stc2828 China's territorial claims are especially comical, given that they're claiming the territory of a county they conquered (aksai chin, sikkim and other territories belong to Tibet. We conquered Tibet, therefore this territory 1000 miles away from our civilizational core is sovereign Chinese clay). Russia's revanchist behaviour has been contemptible, but the Chinese are easily the most territorially ambitious great power on the planet today.

  • @stc2828

    @stc2828

    Ай бұрын

    @@dillamadukes21 India territorial claims is even more comical , “British conquered this land therefore it belongs to India” Maybe India should respect Sikkim’s sovereignty and give their independence back first 😀

  • @yeetman4953

    @yeetman4953

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@stc2828wait wasnt sikkim interageted with a vote?

  • @biggiouschinnus7489
    @biggiouschinnus7489Ай бұрын

    Love how Dwarkesh literally tries every possible way he can to justify being nice to Russia; as others have pointed out, I doubt he'd be saying the same if India were getting invaded by China!

  • @Victor-ov7hw

    @Victor-ov7hw

    Ай бұрын

    Is not being nice is PUTTING YOURSELF on the opposite point of view. People like you, that hate Russia, or china or whoever the media tells you to hate for whatever reason are incapable of doing that

  • @joestrat2723
    @joestrat2723Ай бұрын

    What a great speaker this woman is. I agree with her on the nuke threat. Putin has all the power, money, women, and palaces he could ever want. 30 minutes after he launched a nuke he'd either be a grease stain on Red Square, or Tsar of his nuclear bunker in Siberia....and not much else.

  • @pedroforonda
    @pedroforondaАй бұрын

    How will Sarah define Portugal and Spain in their “golden years”? Where they a continental empires or maritime empires?

  • @sentryion3106

    @sentryion3106

    Ай бұрын

    I mean Spain is in Europe and Mexico is in the americas. There’s an ocean between the two

  • @pedroforonda

    @pedroforonda

    Ай бұрын

    @@sentryion3106 true that. But they were a maritime nation, but also a continental land grabber continental empire, perhaps?

  • @asksomeoneelsefirst
    @asksomeoneelsefirstАй бұрын

    I definitely think that the gentleman asking the questions is 100% as far as trying to ask relevant questions I definitely think that this woman is definitely deeply in trench in a neon strategy. Justify United States wars, and to condemn wars by any other nation, other than Israel. I think it’s awful suspicious that she’s everywhere on the Internet, all the sudden when people are questioning the war in Ukraine and the legitimacy of it and questioning the harsh treatment that Israel is giving to Gaza. Not to mention why are we paying for Israel’s bombs?

  • @frankfowlkes7872
    @frankfowlkes7872Ай бұрын

    I find it interesting that many of the same people that hate Putin and the Russian model seem to be willing to give China a pass. I do believe Ms. Paine is correct about using the Ukrainians as proxies for our troops but I am perplexed by the fact we seem afraid to offer the same assistance to Taiwan.

  • @jimispoto8438
    @jimispoto8438Ай бұрын

    Not trying to defend North Korea But we do have active sanctions and trade embargo with them which may have something to do with their starvation problem.

  • @peterg5383

    @peterg5383

    7 күн бұрын

    Yeah but the sanctions and embargoes are a consequence of *THEIR* decisions - *THEY* chose that path.

  • @Tyler-wl8kq
    @Tyler-wl8kqАй бұрын

    Great fantastic analysis

  • @mivapusa
    @mivapusaАй бұрын

    No, we guarantee it if we don't support Ukraine. Because after Ukraine it will be a NATO member.

  • @Turf-yj9ei
    @Turf-yj9eiАй бұрын

    Ben Shapiro: Putin doesn't need to invade Ukraine to contain NATO. NATO is already on Russia's border. Also Ben Shapiro: We've got to stop Putin from taking Ukraine otherwise he'll be set up right on NATO's border Me: 🤨

  • @BadOompaloompa79

    @BadOompaloompa79

    Ай бұрын

    Your mistake was listening to anything Benny shaps says in the first place.

  • @JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese

    @JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese

    Ай бұрын

    Israeli

  • @dillamadukes21

    @dillamadukes21

    Ай бұрын

    He's changed his tune on international foreign policy and Ukraine after the October attacks in Israel. Before the attacks, he was overtly anti interventionist, hostile to American military aid, deeply critical of the government in Kyiv, and happy to regurgitate Kremlin favoured narratives to his audience. Then Israel got hit and suddenly it's deeply in America's interest to be engaged in matters of this sort. In the subsequent months of Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the congressional impasse on defence spending; the show's been particularly amusing listen now that he's had to walk back his position and explain to the MILLIONS of listeners who've been sold the isolationist lie why American engagement in foreign conflicts is important for there well being and the country.

  • @destroyeris3k
    @destroyeris3k5 күн бұрын

    Thank you, Sarah Paine, this was a great interview!

  • @darrencorrigan8505
    @darrencorrigan850525 күн бұрын

    Thanks, Dwarkesh Patel.

  • @BaldBearded101
    @BaldBearded101Ай бұрын

    Great guest but your questions show your biases.

  • @yeetman4953

    @yeetman4953

    Ай бұрын

    your too vague

  • @moiseshuerta3984
    @moiseshuerta3984Ай бұрын

    Russias road systme is "lamentable"? This hack has obviously never been to Russia. Russia runs in rail. Cheap and efficient.

  • @biggiouschinnus7489

    @biggiouschinnus7489

    Ай бұрын

    So what you're saying is that the roads are so bad that everyone goes by train? For the record, I've been to Russia myself - and she's 100% right. Russian roads are awful.

  • @juanbetancourtg68

    @juanbetancourtg68

    Ай бұрын

    She’s a hack.

  • @dillamadukes21

    @dillamadukes21

    Ай бұрын

    @@biggiouschinnus7489 Russia's rail system is nothing to write home about outside of elite municipalities either. Never been to Russia but I've lived all over the world and Russia's roads are more reminiscent of my years in rural south America, or the West Indies than anything I've seen in Europe. I'd imagine the bad weather (harsh winters and "mud season") and corrupt politics compound the matter. Instead of investing their vast oil and mineral wealth into infrastructure, they've chosen to invest in the destruction of generations of wealth.

  • @biggiouschinnus7489

    @biggiouschinnus7489

    Ай бұрын

    @@dillamadukes21 Much of the money has been squirrelled away, to be brutally honest.

  • @Oldsmobile69
    @Oldsmobile6924 күн бұрын

    People have to understand, Nato's new members not only wanted to join, but in the case of Finland, the government was _pressured in to it_ by the people. This wasn't the elite choosing to join, this was a popular cause by a huge majority of Finns.

  • @sriharshacv7760
    @sriharshacv7760Ай бұрын

    She meant North Korea, we Desi's thought Pakistan. We are all clouded by our own biases.

  • @virtualinfinity6280
    @virtualinfinity6280Ай бұрын

    Good video with solid reasoning. However, she fails to acknowledge the fact, that the reason for east-europes economic growth is due to EU memberships and the associated economic help. I think that shows, how valuable the EU is and how important tight economic integration goes. To me, despite its difficulties, the EU is a success story.

  • @sebipatru
    @sebipatruАй бұрын

    Very nice for accepting Eastern European countries in NATO to protect them from Russia. But let's not forget who sold Eastern Europe to Stalin. Maybe if we could we should ask Churchill 😉

  • @300gjw
    @300gjw11 күн бұрын

    I can listen to her talk all day. She is incredibly bright and well spoken.

  • @edytapanasiuk6059
    @edytapanasiuk605928 күн бұрын

    I am glad to know that there are people in the West who think like this lady.

  • @marcusmoonstein242
    @marcusmoonstein242Ай бұрын

    No, we are not risking nuclear war by supporting Ukraine. Putin has already allowed Russia to endure two large-scale and humiliating defeats in this war already without deploying nuclear weapons. If he hasn't used them already he never will, so the best he can do is bluff about using them.

  • @moiseshuerta3984

    @moiseshuerta3984

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah. Ukraine definitely aint worth a nuclear holocaust. Ya obviously don't have kids. Radiation kills cats too.

  • @SkywalkerPaul

    @SkywalkerPaul

    Ай бұрын

    What defeats are those? Last time I checked Ukraine is running out of men in fighting age..

  • @marcusmoonstein242

    @marcusmoonstein242

    Ай бұрын

    @@SkywalkerPaul Russia is running low on men as well. But I'm referring to the humiliating withdrawal after failing to take Kiev and the massive territorial losses during the Ukrainian offensive the following summer.

  • @SkywalkerPaul

    @SkywalkerPaul

    Ай бұрын

    @@marcusmoonstein242 The Russians retreat from Kherson without a fight. That was a tactical retreat not a defeat technically speaking.

  • @Victor-ov7hw

    @Victor-ov7hw

    Ай бұрын

    Sorry, which defeats are those? I am following this conflict in a daily bases and I can't see those defeats in a map

  • @optimusprimevil1646
    @optimusprimevil16468 ай бұрын

    too dismissive to be credible

  • @ReasonableHuman1
    @ReasonableHuman1Ай бұрын

    Putin always wants to get more. He sees 'collective' West is weak and bureaucratic. Therefore we, in my mind, need to keep helping Ukraine. Otherwise, he will conclude that he was right all alone.

  • @victorbarbeau3130
    @victorbarbeau3130Ай бұрын

    You don't avoid war by turning your back

  • @ZimbaZumba
    @ZimbaZumbaАй бұрын

    She is a Naval War College Historian, ie a propagandist. Much of what she says is good but some is clear propaganda.

  • @user-tf7uo9tv8d
    @user-tf7uo9tv8d8 ай бұрын

    OK - get these 2 on the front line for a week then have this discussion again. And anyway, which country would ever be crazy enough to drop nuclear weapons on civilians? Oh yeah, right... sorry.

  • @johnthompson16

    @johnthompson16

    Ай бұрын

    So you have been on the front line? Which side?

  • @moiseshuerta3984

    @moiseshuerta3984

    Ай бұрын

    ​@johnthompson16 I haven't been on the front. Nor want to be. Neither do this hack promoting war.

  • @user-im2hz4ki2o
    @user-im2hz4ki2oАй бұрын

    I doubt we’ll ever really have the chance, but I would really like to hear a long-form discussion about Ukraine between Sarah Paine, John Mearsheimer and Jeffrey Sachs. I could be wrong but it seems that Sarah Paine comes from a school of thought more rooted in conventional thinking based on historical analogs - but expense a great deal of effort to understand foreign perspectives. John Mearheimer seems to come from a perspective of great power politics and Jeffrey Sachs personally had a great deal of hands on first person experience working with the Russians during and after the collapse of the Soviet Union (and the Chinese for that matter). I think they all have valid and very valuable insights and I would be interested to hear them navigate their disagreements. Of particular interest, I would like to hear Sarah Paine’s thoughts regarding American activities in Ukraine before the start of the war, etc. One of the ultimate questions is, was the US/West justified to meddle in Ukraine. There are lots of lazy emotional opinions about it floating around and so I’d be interested to hear true scholars discuss the matter - not so much as a debate - but as an exploration of the strengths and weaknesses of their different perspectives. The reason I would like to hear these three, is that I have a great deal of respect for John Mearsheimer not infrequently attesting that he does his best but could be wrong in his theories. I have a great deal of respect for Sarah Paine showing no hesitation about saying ‘I don’t know’ or citing that a topic simply falls outside of her expertise. And Jeffrey Sachs has always been modest, cited his first person experience and has always exhaustively fought, while working with the US as well as other governments - for diplomatic solutions which preserve human life. And I think all three demonstrate exceptionally good faith when engaging with those with whom they disagree. Barring that and in the meantime, I’m definitely going to watch more of Sarah Paine’s interviews and lectures.

  • @blindside4076

    @blindside4076

    Ай бұрын

    Very well said! I too would relish such a discussion. Much respect to all the scholars you’ve mentioned… a real “marketplace of ideas” with respect, honesty and humility… to build understanding… this is so needed in the world.

  • @lightforce4604

    @lightforce4604

    Ай бұрын

    Sarah Paine is the exact opposite of John Mearsheimer regarding these issues lol.

  • @user-im2hz4ki2o

    @user-im2hz4ki2o

    Ай бұрын

    @@lightforce4604 Right. That’s why I would like to hear them have a discussion.

  • @glennmcc64
    @glennmcc64Ай бұрын

    Excellent insights

  • @Leto2ndAtreides
    @Leto2ndAtreidesАй бұрын

    Something does need to be done about countries having primitive systems. But the nuclear escalation risk is a legit problem. Mostly, there was inadequate effort to "actively" work with the Russians in moving them in a positive direction. When primitive systems are the status quo, the leaders aren't going to know how to improve them... Just as US politicians don't get obvious things about improving US systems. Politicians are rarely suited to designing and improving systems.

  • @supernovaaust
    @supernovaaustАй бұрын

    Many people fought and died for our freedom, took lot greater risks...

  • @mv11000
    @mv11000Ай бұрын

    GREAT HOST

  • @michaelk5825
    @michaelk582528 күн бұрын

    Love that line - "I'm not making that up!"

  • @ZS-bg7jo
    @ZS-bg7jo24 күн бұрын

    As the 'special military operation' has dragged on and the world has gotten a look at the true status of Russia's military infrastructure, it is a real question what the status, viability, and even existence of their nuclear stockpile. Weapons have a halflife... the fuel and launch facilities deteriorate. Maintenance is costly and extensive in scope. How much has been looted?

  • @cht2162
    @cht216227 күн бұрын

    She's brilliant!!!!

  • @alpardo4124
    @alpardo4124Ай бұрын

    Well l'm glad she understands that Putin never has, and never will "negotiate" , even if he may claim to want to.

  • @angelaparente4470
    @angelaparente4470Ай бұрын

    We need to support peace and freedom, and Goodwill

  • @jhwheuer
    @jhwheuer18 күн бұрын

    That old wall was unfortunately built a few thousand kilometers too far West.

  • @robb7733
    @robb773322 күн бұрын

    She's fabulous. Very knowledgeable

  • @traitretrudeau2367

    @traitretrudeau2367

    19 күн бұрын

    can you tell me a single way putin is doubling down? it'S the US doubling down with no back down plan lol, this woman would get destroye din an actual debate

  • @robb7733

    @robb7733

    19 күн бұрын

    @@traitretrudeau2367 It's hard to tell anything about this conflict due to the dishonest media. Do you remember how "sick and dying" Putin was?? Where the hell did that come from? Media lies.

  • @pplr1

    @pplr1

    18 күн бұрын

    "tell me a single way putin is doubling down?" Putin is doubling down by repeatedly sending in more troops after the initial invasion attempt stalled.

  • @prefadom
    @prefadom14 күн бұрын

    Mrs, You are amazing.

  • @querlimfranco8466
    @querlimfranco8466Ай бұрын

    i love this woman's insights

  • @ruslanagadzhanyan2753
    @ruslanagadzhanyan2753Ай бұрын

    If you don't stop bully now, he will think that can do bully you again!

  • @kevine.lemaster8473
    @kevine.lemaster8473Ай бұрын

    She really doesn't like the Russian road system lol

  • @user-sg6bt3hx4p
    @user-sg6bt3hx4pАй бұрын

    Love her attitude.

  • @dlee732ad
    @dlee732adАй бұрын

    Kicking the can down the road, Russia will continue to be an aggressor

  • @jackr2287
    @jackr228716 күн бұрын

    7:16 This only works so long as the American empire is strong. With the formation of BRICs and competing systems against the Dollar, those sanctions might not mean as much anymore.

  • @anthonymontgomery2727
    @anthonymontgomery27276 күн бұрын

    Who is this lady. Is she a history major. She really knows her stuff as far as the things i know

  • @slp1078
    @slp107813 күн бұрын

    In 2004, Romania and 5 other Countires I believe, might be 4 don't quote me on that. Anyways all four joined at once and I believe it was called the "Treaty of Peace". Everyone is sick of war

  • @jamesivie5717
    @jamesivie57179 күн бұрын

    I agree with AssandroMarcoln, this woman is fantastic.

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