Touchless said:
rootube said:
agent-maroon said:
Teslag said:
That's a ridiculous deal. We didn't send them $500 billion total. And the the aid we did give them was mostly book value of weapons, some of which was produced during the Cold War to be used against Russia.
Why is it "ridiculous"? Because it favors the USA? Freedom isn't free, and it's far better to consider our aid a loan to be paid back rather than yet another domestic inflationary handout to a foreign country that almost certainly wouldn't do the same if the situation were reversed.
I'm as in favor of effing up the russians as anybody that's posted on this thread, but if we can get the Ukranians to pay for their own sovereignty then how could anybody be against that?
If you are in favor of "effing up" the Russians then consider the deal from the Ukrainian perspective. The deal includes no security guarantees for Ukraine in exchange for forfeiting basically all mineral rights in their country. In the last several days Trump has.
Blamed Ukraine for the war
Called Zelenskyy the illegitimate leader of his country
Issued a reparations number TO UKRAINE many times the value of what we have given in aid
Excluded Ukraine from the negotiations for ending a war in their own country
Conceded that Ukraine will never join NATO
Conceded that Ukraine will need to give up more territory
Mike Johnson has clearly stated we have no intention of signing a deal for additional aid.
All this PRIOR to starting negotiations with Russia. Can you name a single Russian concession that the Trump team is discussing?
If I were Zelenskyy, I would be discussing mineral rights with a country willing to provide additional military guarantees.
Just a thought here, but if we have mineral rights with Ukraine, they're useless if they fall into Russia's hands. The US has a vested interest in Ukraine remaining sovereign because of the minerals.
I guess you would have to assess our willingness to pursue defending mostly undeveloped mineral rights in Eastern Europe with the backdrop of the US pursuing disengagement with NATO and Europe in general. There have been serious discussions about the US removing troops from Poland and the Baltics. We have also ruled out US peacekeeping forces in Ukraine.
A cynic would say it would be easier for us to cut a deal with Russia to give them Ukraine in exchange for a mineral deal. There is zero evidence we would double down in Europe and strong evidence that our relationship with Russia is warming.
A FAR easier solution would be for Europe to use the $300B in frozen Russian assets to purchase US weapons. This would provide a direct investment in the US economy and have a secondary benefit of allowing us to modernize our own defense.