• GivingEuropeASpook [they/them, comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Honest question, what do you mean by "bad"? Morally bad?

    Bad in the sense that they violate people's right to self-determination.

    When has that ever been a meaningful factor in the security perogatives of a state?

    It hasn't, that's the issue. When have the security prerogatives of a state ever been a consideration for communists or anarchists?

    International relations have long been governed by a system of bad-faith actors who go and make all these rules about national sovereignty and the theoretical equality it brings between nation-states only to set out to immediately try and undermine it. The US is really good at maintaining plausible deniability in the eyes of much of its populace and the world, at least initially (see: Iraq WMDs, the continued use of the Monroe Doctrine well into the present day, etc).

    despite your pfp, you've been saying a lot of stuff in this thread that would seem to come from a more standard liberal perspective.

    This is just because on this specific issue, I am not in agreement with what I perceive as reflexive support for Russia. I supported the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan, regardless of the immediate material consequences to Afghanistanians who opposed the Taliban, so I support the withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine, despite there being similar reasons to advocate for staying, from the perspective of the Russian/Ukrainian rebel and their supporters. I've also been trying to find the more shitty liberal takes to reply to them too.

    Also, how is it an occupation when the DPR and LPR are fighting alongside the RF as allies

    Well, if security prerogatives of States are to be considered, Ukraine's internationally recognized borders have been violated by another sovereign power. If they're not, then only the positions occupied after February 23rd of 2022 would be under occupation.