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  1. Putin will go nucjear if and when but not before Nato or the US does.
    D J S

  2. ‘The world is dangerously close to nuclear war. ‘ Ben, this may not be the case at all. I’m not sure it’s a good idea to fan those flames. It’s not a world war. It’s a Russian expansionist war, involving coercion to persuade neighboring Kyiv to adopt Russian rather than ‘western’ orientation. Perhaps we need a sense of proportion in this.

  3. Problem for Putin is that he only has nuclear targets in the Ukraine he can attack to justify trying to subjugate his western front to Russia’s influence. NATO and the USA has all of Russia as targets. Even a small device dropped on the Kremlim will mean Putin is finished. Sure he can retaliate but the devices in Germany will hit Russia before any missile strikes the USA.

    Strategically the positioning of the nuclear weapons equipped submarines is vital. Bet USA / UK submarines are in the Baltic Sea and Russians in the eastern Pacific.

    If Putin gains control over the Ukraine, then NATO will strengthen the Polish forces and Putin has the same problem. His Western face is still exposed. NATO will still be on his doorstep. Plus he has to fight a internal war with the 30 million Ukranians. Ties up a lot of resources. Ukraine is not a Chechnya or Georgia. where he won one side conflicts against weak opposition.

    In fact Putin saw his one sided war in Georgia and the west muted response as a green light to continue his westward expansion. Worth a read;

    https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/the-2008-russo-georgian-war-putins-green-light/

    “The international reaction to Russia’s military campaign in Georgia was to prove remarkably muted, with Moscow suffering few negative consequences. On the contrary, EU leaders led calls for a ceasefire that appeared to favor Russian interests, while the US under the new Obama administration was soon calling for a reset in relations with the Kremlin.

    Understandably, many in Moscow interpreted this accommodating approach as an informal invitation for further acts of aggression in Russia’s traditional sphere of influence. Six years after the Russo-Georgian War, Russia embarked on a far more comprehensive military campaign against Ukraine, where Moscow continues to occupy Crimea and large swathes of eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region.”

    Strategically I see no gain for Putin at all. Unless his aim (as you say) is to take the Baltic republics and Poland. Big ask.

  4. We are eons away from nuclear war as evidenced by the fact that the West are extremely prominent in mouthpieces only. Russia finally called the West’s, or more to the point, the USA’s bluff and where are their armies now….no where to be seen. Ukraine, yet another US pawn to be used and….

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