• lazyraccoon@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Thank you for the context. I read up a bit and it seems that due to poor management by the Ukrainian government, since 1994 the Donbas province has suffered from poverty and a harsh life. Also, despite voting to become Independent, their votes were ignored by the Ukrainian government (Now I understand why Putin is calling the Ukrainian facists… I just thought he went demented).

      I wonder why this story isn’t told, why the people of the donbas didn’t appeal to the UN to establish independence (or Russia, if they wanted to become Russians)… Why did it end up such a bloody mess instead of a diplomatic solution? This war doesn’t come off as a liberation war.

      • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        why the people of the donbas didn’t appeal to the UN to establish independence

        They did. No country outside of South Ossetia, itself an unrecognized country, recognized their independence. Sadly not even Cuba did when specifically asked. Yes that means Russia also didn’t. Despite significant internal pressure to do that (most significantly, by the communist party), Putin and Russian government hoped for peaceful resolution by the Minsk agreements. This turned out to be mistake since both west and Ukraine never intended to honor those agreements but used them to arm up Ukraine. Between 2014 and 2022 international situation changed significantly though, Ukraine buildup for the all out invasion of Donbas finally forced Russian govt to decide, either join the war or just watch as Donbas is massacred (and potentially risk political instablity in crucial time since it would be incredibly unpopular move which could easily lead to lose nationalist support for govt).

        • lazyraccoon@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Ok, I’ll assume it to be correct. I can’t corroborate much except for the Minsk agreements, but they make the rest make sense since Russia tried to negotiate these twice.

          I can see why Russia intervened, I can’t see why Russia committed mass murder on civilian population.

          • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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            1 year ago

            I can’t see why Russia committed mass murder on civilian population.

            They didn’t. Civilian losses are very low in that war, UN estimated it for around 10000 dead (for both sides). Compare it to when US Shock and Awe any country and kill milllions. Russia is incredibly restrained as far as the modern warfare goes.

            • lazyraccoon@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              The numbers seem expected, not low. Bucha is probably an exception to the rule, but mass Graves are not a pretty sight.

              Also, the fact that America is a multiple war crimes veteren doesn’t negate my original claim. A serial killer doesn’t make a single murder ok, arguments don’t work that way - rhetorically.

              • CriticalResist8@lemmygrad.mlM
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                1 year ago

                Bucha is a red herring. The event was thoroughly investigated the very day after it was suddenly mediatized, and two pieces of evidence stick out:

                1. The mayor of Bucha, when UA retook control of the city, made no reference to any mass murders or anything. He certainly would have mentioned it if he knew about it.
                2. Videos were filmed shortly (a day or two) also before UA retook the city, and there were no bodies in the streets.

                These civilians were killed by Ukraine. They didn’t publicize it right after they retook the city, it took them a few days to talk about it – plenty of time to commit a massacre. There’s more inconsistencies but these are the two big ones to me. Like some people raised the problem that the bodies looked very fresh (and that nobody talked about the massacre online before UA retook the city), when the official narrative was that the massacre was committed a month before.

                edit: as for mass graves, one of them I believe to have been made by Ukraine. I couldn’t tell you which one exactly though at this time, but Esha K. talked about it on twitter. Russia had made proper graves and even brought UA POWs to witness the processions. They filmed everything and that’s why I mentioned Esha, she has the video on her twitter somewhere. They had also offered to send the bodies to Ukraine for proper burial, which Ukraine refused. So they buried these soldiers themselves. Ukraine then opened the graves and threw the bodies in a mass grave to once again pin something on Russia.

                Remember that Ukraine has committed verifiable war crimes (they boast about them) in just the first months of the war, I posted about this before trying to keep track of them.

                There was another red herring, a woman supposedly wearing nail polish, which NAFO trolls jumped on to claim she was a civilian, but there are women in the UA army and they’re allowed to wear nail polish like you don’t stop wearing it just because you’re a soldier. So it doesn’t mean anything.

                • YEP [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  1 year ago

                  The nyt(yea I know) deep dive convinced me at least a large part of killings were carried out by Russian soldiers. Tying phones, street cameras and other evidence to specific deaths was fairly exhaustive. It seems a case of revenge killing and is still a war crime. Massacres do happen and soldiers who commit them should be prosecuted, although I doubt the nyt would spend the hours to do this and call for the prosecutions on Americans for the millions who died in the middle east. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/12/21/world/europe/bucha-ukraine-massacre-victims.html

                  You can say well the Ukrainian push for regular people to fight back or whatever leads to things like this and you can be right. I don’t think that gets these soldiers off the hook.

                  • CriticalResist8@lemmygrad.mlM
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                    1 year ago

                    I’m reading through it through firefox’s reader to bypass the paywall and most of their stories are conjecture (I read most of them and skipped the rest). Even worse, they’re just that: stories. They have no dates attached, just a name, age, and “was never seen again”. I don’t doubt these people were in Bucha in March, but beyond that the NYT is not tying them to the massacre itself. Just that they were in the fighting. Like there’s telegrams screencaps saying “this person was killed march 5 can you help me move their body” but the message itself isn’t dated, very amateur.

                    NYT is the journal that has been cheering for the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan for decades, they have a very high bar to clear if they want to be taken at face value.

                    The part about how they reported this is word salad, it’s the exact same method Buzzfeed used to find the “Uyghur concentration camps” that were actually factories and schools: google maps and their “sources”

              • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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                1 year ago

                Expected? By whom? Liberals seems to expect millions because they as usual projected the US army standard. I said America not because some kind of dreaded whataboutism or deflections, i used that example because as foremost warmonger on the planet they do set up the standard of contemporary warfare, which is to bomb everything, drone weddings, burn cities with white phosphorus, poison the earth and people with defoliants and depleted uranium, drop millions of bombs that kill people even decades later… and look, they are sending the same shit to Ukraine.

                • lazyraccoon@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  Expected because during 1948 in the Israeli independence war (also known as Nakba for the Palestinians), 10000 Palestinian civilians died in multiple instances including several war crimes. Comparatively to other wars where civilian population was involved, it sounds about right. Doesn’t mean that every war will end up in 10k, it just makes sense due to a comparison. Used here not as an argument in and of itself, but as a ruler to measure expectations.

                  And again, your well founded accusations of America as being worse than Russia doesn’t make Russia free of blame. If you killed 50 people, does that mean that if I kill you, I’m a hero that showed restraint? No. I’m a criminal. I’m not a serial murderer, but I am a murderer nonetheless. Even a police officer that were to kill you would be under an investigation to establish that he had no choice, and if proven that he could’ve brought you to justice alive, he would face prison (at least, if the justice system works).

                  Also, I am not American. I am not saying America is ok. Right now, America is getting rich off of death of Russians and Ukrainians the same way they’ve been doing since 1910 - as the world’s largest arms dealer. Their capitalist hunger fuels a military industrial complex that spreads war, chaos and death. America is also hypocritical enough to be fighting a proxy war with Russia through the Ukraine in retaliation of the Russian invasion, under the guise of “We supply weapons”. Bullshit they do more than supply weapons and aid. They train Ukrainian soliders and send free mercenaries in.

                  • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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                    1 year ago

                    Why are you say anything about justification now? I was rebuking your argument that Russians committed mass murder in Ukraine, which they didn’t and you agreed saying the numbers were expected, but you suddenly moved into some kind of moral argument for some reason.

                    Now i don’t agree with the expectations, because you still didn’t said who expected it and from reading of nearly all liberal articles about those numbers they not only expect much more but are even making them up contrary to the apparently most trustworthy assessments.

                    Nakba is comparable in terms of numbers of victims and lenght of war but the military forces were much lower than the ones in Ukraine and intensity of the war was also much lower - just compare the ratio of military to civilian losses.