Looks like wishful thinking!Johann wrote:There's going to be some important impacts if Russia does actually send troops in to Eastern Ukraine when all of this dust settles.
- Whats left of Ukraine will quite possibly be on a NATO accession path, and there will be no Russian electorate to act as an anti-NATO lobby. This is certainly not what Moscow has ever wanted. Ukraine will be lost as a buffer.
- The Kremlin believes its mirror imaging Western use of 'Responsibility 2 Protect' rhetoric, and so its safe from any real blowback.
When the Soviets declared the 'Brezhnev Doctrine' and crushed the Prague Spring in 1968 after the Czechs dared to chose their own government the West did nothing but make feeble sounding statements. It turned into the beginning of the end of the Cold War. It split Marxists movement worldwide (the Soviets most effective secret weapon) alike nothing before. It convinced the Chinese Communist Party they had to make an opening to the Americans. It convinced the Romanians and North Koreans they needed to get further away from Moscow. The Brezhnev Doctrine dragged Moscow into Afghanistan which damaged even more of its relationships and escalated the global Cold War to a level it couldn't afford.
Putin's *only* friendly neighbors are Kazakhstan and Belarus - now they too must worry about the potential for Russian intervention with their sizeable Russian minorities should their relationships ever sour. They'll avoid antagonising him in the short term, but they will seek insurance policies.
NATO as an organisation was withering on the vine until recently - Europeans deployed to Afghanistan out of treaty obligation, but with no enthusiasm. Now everything is different.
The problem now will be that Europeans will expect a larger commitment than Obama is willing to make, particularly given the 'pivot to Asia' and the year-on-year defence budget cuts that have already started.
But even that might see some reversals. One interesting side effect is that NASA is now cutting space cooperation with Russia outside the ISS. This will almost certainly mean that the consistently underfunded Commercial Crew Program will now *have* to receive peak funding in order to give US astronauts a ride on the SpaceX Dragon or Dream-Chaser as an alternative to Soyuz. This is back to the situation of the 1970s with simultaneous cooperation and competition. Only appropriate since that is the exact era Putin is so nostalgic for. If the current climate continues the Americans could get the Europeans, the Japanese and the Canadians to pitch in as well. Good news for commercial space.
The only way Putin can avoid getting sucked into a competition he can not win is to leave Ukraine alone. It all depends on whether he's actually learned anything from the Soviet Cold War experience.
There are logical inconsistencies in the logic. Russia of today is not Brezhnev's USSR, that it has to defend a world wide ideology. No ideology, no loss.
Secondly, why, if the EU is really so gung ho with anti-Russian sentiment, that it expects the US to carry the cross? Are they really interested in taking on the bear? And if Germany is in a deep economic relationship with Russia, is there any hope for an anti-Russian stance in the EU ever?

Third, American, European, Japanese and Canadian space programs are the most expensive space programs in the world. There coming together will be the death toll of affordable space programs. The Americans, with infinite myopia, threw the Russians out of every program except the ISS. We know why. Russians provide the heavy lifting capabilities at extremely affordable rates to the ISS. The ISS will become economically unjustifiable without Russian participation. Since the Americans have already ended cooperation with Russia on everything else, Putin has nothing left to lose by ending cooperation on ISS as well. The westerners will be left between a rock and a hard place - they can't end the ISS midway because then they will have to justify the cost already sunk into it. And if they have to foot the transport bill themselves, then it means siphoning money from other projects. Putin may kill the other projects (the ones from which Russian cooperation was removed) by simply refusing cooperation on ISS.



Sure, funding can be increased, but try and justify that when the economy is hurting.
The problem with the west is they don't realize how quickly they are becoming redundant in the world, and they are not able to adjust.
The invasion on Iraq (the 2003 one, not the 1991 version) was the last high tide of western intervention in the world. The west has not been able to successfully invade any other country since then. Libya is too small to count, and too close to EU to be a test case.
If anything, other countries will try and not antagonize the bear after this.