@markmetz@sfba.social
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markmetz

@markmetz@sfba.social

Tooting my horn here in the Fedi since 2022!

Hot Take Maker - Breaking News Breaker
Occasional Jumper of Sharks

In favor of saving the world and stopping the bullshit. Known to punch nazis.

Chochenyo turf walker. Flâneur de Sarthe

Please join me when I play records and stream live audio on Mixlr.

My book "Vinyl Vitality"
coming soon here:
https://mark-metz.com/music

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

markmetz, to Ukraine
@markmetz@sfba.social avatar

Good news, this election went the right direction. 👍

“Vilnius fears it could be next in the crosshairs if Moscow were to win its war against Ukraine.

Lithuania is a significant donor to Ukraine, which has been battling Russia since the 2022 invasion. It is already a big defence spender, with a military budget equal to 2.75 percent of GDP.”

Lithuanian President Nauseda re-elected in vote held amid security fears over Russia





https://www.france24.com/en/europe/20240526-lithuanians-vote-in-presidential-runoff-amid-security-fears-over-russia

markmetz, to Ukraine
@markmetz@sfba.social avatar

These seven words make more sense than a “conference”





markmetz, to random
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🤪

markmetz, to random
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More worms… that admission by him was fodder for days, I wonder what his motivation was in revealing that, aside from the fact that everything that comes out of his mouth is bullshit.

markmetz, to random
@markmetz@sfba.social avatar

One for the tankies.
🤡

markmetz, to random
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Ah well yes… here’s @jensorensen helping us make sense of our topsy turvy world again… 😬

GottaLaff, to Ukraine
@GottaLaff@mastodon.social avatar

Zelenskyy says has taken back control in areas of embattled Kharkiv region

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says Ukrainian forces have secured “combat control” of areas where Russian troops entered Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region earlier this month
https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/zelenskyy-ukraine-back-control-areas-embattled-kharkiv-region-110557585

markmetz,
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@GottaLaff
That deserves a Canuck-style NAFO meme!
Bonk on!





markmetz, to random
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Shot:

US Thinking of Letting Ukraine Use Its Weapons to Strike Russia: NYT

https://www.businessinsider.com/us-ukraine-use-american-weapons-russia-red-line-putin-nyt-2024-5

markmetz,
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markmetz, to Ukraine
@markmetz@sfba.social avatar

Cope harder Pooty. Pull your head out.
The war ends when you run your sorry ass back to Moscow with your tail between your legs.

But this seems like a good sign, it appears he’s looking for a way out.

Exclusive: Putin wants Ukraine ceasefire on current frontlines | Reuters

#NAFO
#Ukraine
#NAFOFellas
#SlavaUkraini
#NAFOExpansionIsNonNegotiable

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/putin-wants-ukraine-ceasefire-current-frontlines-sources-say-2024-05-24/

markmetz, to random
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Does this job still exist? Where do I apply?

“A lipstick tester from the 1950s.”

markmetz, to Ukraine
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markmetz, to random
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““More unbelievable still, Newsmax’s counsel claimed that they had forgotten the archive existed, which is why none of Mr. Kanofsky’s emails had been produced,” Smartmatic attorneys wrote.”

Newsmax CEO deleted evidence in defamation case: Smartmatic

H/T @Brandi_Buchman

https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/newsmaxs-cover-up-worked-smartmatic-says-media-ceo-deleted-evidence-key-to-ongoing-2020-election-defamation-suit/

markmetz, to random
@markmetz@sfba.social avatar

4/

Threatening Russia’s control of Crimea—and inflicting grave damage to its economy and society—will, of course, be difficult. But it is a more realistic strategy than the proposed alternative: a negotiated settlement while Putin is in office.

Putin has never agreed to respect Ukrainian sovereignty—and never will. If anything, Russia’s rhetoric about the war has become more annihilationist, invoking the Russian Orthodox Church and suggesting that the conflict is something like a holy war, with existential consequences.

Any negotiation in the current circumstances would at best leave Ukraine crippled, partitioned, and at the mercy of a second Russian invasion. At worst, it would eliminate the country altogether.

No sustainable, long-term peace can emerge from negotiations with an aggressor that has genocidal intent.

Ukraine and the West must either win or face devastating consequences.
(EXACTLY!)

markmetz,
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13/

Ukraine’s success on land, air, and sea must be coupled with extensive pressure on the economic and information fronts.

The United States and Europe should introduce a much more aggressive sanctions campaign that includes secondary sanctions on any company operating in Russia. Russians must see their national wealth dissipating, and their economy headed for permanent stunting, for the consequences of Putin’s invasion to hit home.

The West must also mount an aggressive information campaign—comparable to that waged against Nazi Germany in World War II or the Soviet Union during the height of the Cold War—to intensify the divisions over perception of the war within and outside Russia.

Russians have accepted the war passively: they need to be reminded, through an array of techniques that include both overt and covert propaganda, of its intolerable human and societal costs.

markmetz,
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14/

Putin has too much at stake to end the war himself, but the same is not true of those around him who do not wish to see Russia reduced to indefinite impoverishment; drained of physical resources, youth, and talent; and subjugated to a state of permanent vassalage to China.

Putin and his leadership are the center of gravity of the Russian war effort; any effort to end the war must begin with undermining his regime and its appearance of success and infallibility.

markmetz,
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15/

Ukraine’s military strategy must be integrated with its political agenda. Russian history shows that disastrous Russian wars lead to political change.

Russia’s defeat at the hands of Ottoman and European forces in the 1853–56 Crimean War barred Russia from deploying a navy in the Black Sea and trimmed its expansionist goals for years, and the bloody losses of the 1904–5 Russo-Japanese war led to a major break in the absolute autocracy of tsarist rule.

A military humiliation today could prompt similar political upheaval. The Putin regime may not seem weak on the surface, but its stability is a mirage produced by the repression it exerts.

markmetz,
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16/

TO ACHIEVE VICTORY, STOP FEARING IT

Ukraine is already stepping up to meet the challenge. Kyiv is increasing its ability to tap into its manpower reserves by lowering the conscription age and rolling back exemptions from military service. This step is painful but necessary and brings to mind the drafts instituted by many Western nations throughout both world wars.

The West, led by the United States, is continuing to provide training and advice, especially for commanders. And the West should continue to deliver large quantities of materiel—particularly having seen how delays in aid can give Russia the upper hand on the battlefield. Such assistance is essential to Kyiv’s success.

markmetz,
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17/

But there is another major contribution the West can make: direct collaboration with Ukraine’s defense industry.

The sector has grown exponentially over the last two years; the drone industry, for instance, went from producing a handful of drones in 2022 to manufacturing tens of thousands of them today.

Ukrainian-made systems have also grown more sophisticated, managing to strike targets deep in Russia in ways that would have been unthinkable in 2022.

markmetz,
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18/

The country’s success should not have come as a surprise. Ukraine was at the core of the Soviet Union’s aerospace industry, and today it has plenty of skilled engineers and an entrepreneurial spirit.

But it needs Western technologies, components, production equipment, vendor financing, and partnerships to reach its full potential.

If the West can deliver these resources, Ukraine’s manufacturing capacity will skyrocket, bolstering the country’s battlefield success.

With Western help, for example, Kyiv would be able to increase drone production by an order of magnitude and get them onto the battlefield even faster. A joint Western-Ukrainian industrial strategy is as critical as a military one.

markmetz,
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19/

If the West can help Ukraine’s defense industry get fully up to speed, Russia’s positions will grow untenable.

The country’s strategy depends on mass, its ability to allocate and concentrate forces, and some elements of technical sophistication, such as electronic warfare.

But Russia is tactically poor, which makes it vulnerable to a sustained and large-scale drone-based campaign.

A Ukrainian air offensive that dismantles Russian logistics, puts increasing pressure on Russia’s economy and military infrastructure, and destroys (rather than neutralizes) the country’s Black Sea Fleet would produce shocks at home that would likely endanger Putin’s regime.

markmetz,
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20/

At the moment, Putin’s subordinates believe that the war is winnable. Only by breaking that belief through Russian defeats can Ukraine and the West open the door to Putin’s withdrawal or eventual overthrow.

Under such conditions, Putin will likely choose self-preservation over victory. And if for some reason he does not, others may make that choice for him.

In any event, Ukraine should press on with its campaign to retake territory. A different kind of land offensive—one that comes after Kyiv has achieved air superiority with its drone campaign—could isolate and liberate Crimea.

markmetz,
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21/

Some Western analysts, fearing nuclear escalation, may be scared of this kind of Ukrainian victory. Putin has certainly tried to encourage such fears over the past two years, hinting that he might use nuclear weapons when the West has considered providing tanks, missiles, and jets.

But Putin has never acted on his belligerent rhetoric, even as the West invariably crossed each of those redlines. Instead, Ukraine has incurred the costs of U.S. and European dithering; in the summer of 2022, while its partners debated what assistance to offer, Kyiv lost critical opportunities to capitalize on its first successful counterattacks by continuing with a swift destruction of Putin’s forces.

The reality is that a Russian nuclear attack would provoke such a fierce Western response, particularly from the United States, that Putin is highly unlikely to take the risk. He is especially unlikely to go nuclear given that Putin’s friends in Beijing are also dead set against such strikes.

markmetz,
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22/

The West’s general fear of instability is grounded in fact: a decisive defeat may indeed spell the end of Putinism, leaving Russia in a state of political uncertainty.

But it is not the task of the West to save a criminal regime from collapsing. Russia today is a state that routinely commits mass murder, torture, and rape; it conducts sabotage operations and killings on NATO soil; and it carries out disinformation and political interference campaigns.

It has pledged unremitting hostility to the West not because of what the West has done but because of what it is.

markmetz,
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23/

Putin’s regime, in other words, long ago left the community of civilized nations.

The only chance Russia has to return to normalcy is through defeat, which will crush Putin’s imperial ambitions and allow the country to soberly reevaluate its path and eventually rejoin the society of civilized nations.

This does not mean that the West’s strategy should openly aim for regime change. But it does mean Ukraine and its partners should not fear the self-destruction of Putin and his apparatus of control.

markmetz,
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24/

In this war, resources, funds, and technology all overwhelmingly favor the West.

If they are channeled to Ukraine in sufficient amounts, including to the country’s defense industry, Kyiv can win.

Russia simply lacks the military power to defeat a Western-backed Ukraine, and so its only hope lies in manipulating Western concerns.

It is therefore well past time for NATO governments to stop falling into Putin’s trap.

For the West to achieve a victory, it must stop fearing it. In doing so, it can attain security for itself and Ukraine—which has sacrificed so much, both for its own cause and for the larger cause of freedom.

</>

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/ukraine/theory-victory-ukraine

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