Russian President Vladimir Putin's 'exit strategy' should simply be the removal of his troops from Ukraine,' Canada's ambassador to the United Nations says. https://t.co/Rjge08ZiHi
— CBC News (@CBCNews) May 23, 2022
The nuclear danger is still a real concern, and perhaps there is fear that as Russia weakens it will lash out:I wrote about the unexpected success of economic sanctions against Putin — unexpected both in degree and in kind. Which adds to my puzzlement at the weird aversion much of the foreign-policy commentariat seems to have to success 1/ https://t.co/gBl35pWFKX
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) May 20, 2022
I still remember Emily Gorcenski's tweet from March 1, where she gave this ranking of her primary fears about what disasters might ensue from the then-week-old Ukraine Russia War :Many rightly fear escalation including unintentional or accidental escalation.
— Greg R. Lawson (@ConservaWonk) May 22, 2022
This is a very dangerous situation. Maybe it does not escalate, BUT the scale of damage as a result of escalation is unlike anything we've seen.
Seeking 2 avoid this is morally understandable.
- protracted insurgency- mistargeted/overflying cruise missile hits NATO country- US gets caught with a Joint Special Operations Command team- tactical nuke is used but doesn’t rise to retaliation- does