Millennie Al wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 2:20 am
Bird on a Fire wrote: Tue Feb 22, 2022 8:28 pm
Trying to make ordinary citizens suffer till they overthrow their horrible government doesn't seem to have worked well in Cuba, Iran, Vuvuzela, DPRK, etc etc.
There's also the moral dimension. If a kidnapper takes hostages, should the authorities threaten to sanction the hostages if they don't do enough to escape or fight (like happened on United Airlines Flight 93)?
Perhaps rather than sanctions, you should think of it as more of a blockade - the goal is to undermine the aggressor's ability to fight by depriving them of the resources they need to engage in aggression. In this instance, the targeted resource is money.
Meanwhile, the Russians are moving in multiple rocket launchers - BM21s, which have already fired on Ukraine, and even worse, TOS-1s. These are the sort of weapons that are used by people who either don't care at all about civilian casualties, or people who do care and want to cause them. The Russian position - as made clear by Lavrov - is they do not recognise even the idea of Ukrainian sovereignty.
If you haven't done so, you need to see Putin's speech. He made it extremely clear, he seeks to reinstate the Russian Empire, and that puts a target on numerous countries, Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Finland among them. We've seen in Syria how Putin's forces fight, and it is not a pleasant sight. This is going to continue, sporadically, until he finds he cannot continue. It's not about NATO, or anything the west has done. When Putin first invaded Ukraine, it was a neutral country.
The choice is simple; either sanctions cripple Russia to the point the Russian military cannot operate or the Putin regime collapses, or more and more people will have to take up arms in an unequal struggle to defend their own homes.