Tonight, Kos writes:The minute we allow the war in Ukraine to become background noise we lose. We must have the nerve to continue to stare pain down the barrel and envelop it with love. Our compassion has power. Don’t look away.
— ashton kutcher (@aplusk) April 26, 2022
Observers are increasingly concerned that the longer the Ukraine Russia War goes on, the moreThe May 9 Victory Parade should prove an inflection point: does Vladimir Putin use the occasion to call for a mass mobilization to bolster the war effort, or will he keep pretending that it’s merely a “limited military operation” that remains splendidly on track, dooming the entire effort?Ukraine’s regular army and Territorial Defense Forces have bought time for those 300,000 reservists out west to train and get equipped. A couple more months, and they’ll be riding into battle in Polish T-72s, American and European armored personnel carriers, and lots of sweet, sweet, modern artillery.How will Russia respond, even as it attrits its existing forces on the daily?
2/ First is the superb Watling + Reynolds essay, which catalogues a disturbing shift in Russia "from presenting the war in Ukraine as a limited struggle for Donbas to a systemic struggle with NATO in which Ukraine was merely the military battlefield"https://t.co/PFfAFyxfiI
— Mike Mazarr (@MMazarr) April 27, 2022
But on the other hand, this:20/ But it can't be discounted. If it happens, demands for knee-jerk US action will come thick + fast. The balancing act at the core of US strategy--support Ukraine and punish RU enough to win + enforce norms, w/o courting a larger war--will become acute + perhaps unsustainable
— Mike Mazarr (@MMazarr) April 27, 2022
A sign of a few things. 1) Ukrainian resistance and adaptability has impressed them no end. 2) they do think that Ukraine can ‘win’, 3) they seem to think that Russian escalation is not particularly likely.
— Phillips P. OBrien (@PhillipsPOBrien) April 27, 2022
And ain't this the truth?Watching families fleeing Ukraine, clinging to their children, Meeka Alivaktuk resolved to do what she could to help.
— CBC Indigenous (@CBCIndigenous) April 27, 2022
The Pangnirtung elder rallied community members to start sewing amautis — Inuit parkas with large hoods designed to carry babies.https://t.co/07vm1N3a4A
Can white people please start to educate yourselves about Indigenous people instead of allowing mistakes to be your “teaching tools?” We don’t need more apologies, we need people to catch up and bring equal knowledge to the table.
— Angela Sterritt (@AngelaSterritt) April 27, 2022