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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Trump's Very Dangerous Rhetoric on Crimea Trump seems to think it is up to the American president to allow or disallow the actions of other major nuclear-armed powers It was President Obama that allowed it to happen, he said. Trump has said something like this before more than once. Earlier this year, he complained that Obama was the one that let Crimea get away and suggested that I may have had a much different attitude. The following week, Trump said, President Obama lost Crimea, because President Putin didnt respect President Obama. The assumption that Russian actions hinge on their leaders attitude towards ours is bizarre and ignores that Russia has agency and interests that have nothing to do with us or our presidents. Trump has repeated this often enough that it is worth spending a little time to pick apart this silly talking point. Most reports on Trumps remarks have focused on his choice to blame Obama for the annexation, but that is not nearly as important as the implication of Trumps statement that he seems to think it is up to the American president to allow or disallow the actions of other major nuclear-armed powers. Saying that Obama allowed the annexation of Crimea presupposes that there was something that Obama could or should have done to prevent or reverse it. Short of starting a shooting war with Russia and presumably causing WWIII, there was nothing Obama could have done, and it is a measure of Trumps ignorance and his belligerent instincts that he thinks otherwise. Whether Russia controls Crimea or not is hardly a vital interest of the U.S., and it certainly isnt worth risking a war. If Trump believes otherwise, he is even more reckless and irresponsible than we thought. Trump talks about losing Crimea as if it were ours to lose. The language of losing Crimea is itself a throwback to the dumbest Cold War-era rhetoric that promoted the fantasy that it was within Americas power to keep or lose entire countries. That sort of thinking is delusional, and its very dangerous if this is how the president looks at international crises. Obama didnt lose Crimea, and it was never the responsibility of the U.S. government to stop what Russia did. Russias action was aggressive and illegal, but the U.S. was under no obligation to risk a war with a nuclear-armed state to undo it. The fact that Trump keeps harping about the loss of a part of a country that isnt even allied to the U.S. shows just how far removed he is from a genuine America First foreign policy. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
I agree with all of this except or the above quote. The joining with Russia was the overwhelming will of the Crimean people. I suppose the right way for the Crimeans to do it would have been to first declare independence from Ukraine, and after going through the normal cival war bloodshed with thousands of people dying, destruction of infrastructure, introduction of disease and refugees fleeing to Russia in boats, THEN declare their will as a sovereign nation to become part of the Russian federation. In THAT case, it would have been formally legal. But it seems the Crimeans wanted to do it illegally, without a literal drop being spilled, and avoid all those formalities demanded by the West. Hell, even our own DoI declares it a natural right for a people to change their government.
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