https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/12/russia-ukraine-nuclear-war-putin-threat/672491/
nuestro amigo phill nos trae la curiosa convergencia entre trump, brexit (Cummings), musks y la "intelectualidad" que se dice "realista", en torno a "apaciguar" al oso ruso, no sea que use nukes...
The views expressed by Trump, Cummings, and Musk intersect with those of certain international-affairs scholars, frequently described as realists, who emphasize the global competition for power, downplay Western rhetoric about promoting democracy and other ideas, and, in many cases, sharply criticize American foreign policy. The political scientist John Mearsheimer, for example, has characterized Russia as a great power and argued that Ukraine must accede to some of its neighbor’s desires. The failure to acknowledge this, he wrote in August, amounts to “playing with fire.” Stephen Walt, Mearsheimer’s frequent collaborator, maintained in May that a nuclear escalation by Russia, though still unlikely, was now “easier to imagine” than it had been a few months earlier.
a phill ya le empieza a oler a chamusquina la cosa:
The realists drastically overestimated Russian strength and grandeur, and they have a history of misreading global power dynamics. True realism would recognize that a variety of participants in the international order have worked hard, and will continue to work hard, to restrain Russia from using nuclear weapons.
vaya, los "realistas" auténticos deberían de reconocer la gran variedad de participantes que están contra el uso de nukes, en lugar de servir de correa de transmisión de la propaganda rusa, eh?? a ver si los realistas son "ciberputis"...
y bueno, el resto del artículo describe a esos otros participantes (india y china) que le han dicho a putin que de nukes ni hablar...
deja caer también que si hubiera nukes en ucrania, ya no es solo que la otan se mete hasta en la cocina del búnker del kremlin o donde se esconda putin, es que ex-repúblicas soviéticas y muchos más, acabarían con nukes porsiaca, y vete a saber en qué queda la federación rusa