Since 1945 until today, U.S. soldiers have been stationed in Germany to deter a Soviet threat and now a Russian threat. I don't recall German leaders describing these deployments as "too provocative" to Moscow. But I'm not an expert on German history. I'm probably wrong. 1/
Imagine, if during the Berlin blockade in 1948, Truman had said, 'better not send any planes; Moscow might think it too provocative?' (Remember, in 1948, West Germany was not a formal ally.) 2/
The Berlin blockade analogy is an instructive one. Think of the counterfactual. Had we not responded and let the Soviets take the city, would Moscow have then stopped threatening West Germany or other parts of Europe? Of course not. 3/
Putin's annexation of Crimea has not stopped him from continuing to undermine Ukrainian sovereignty. No NATO freeze or imposed neutrality on Ukraine will stop him either. 4/
As Ive written before, "In the global struggle between democracy and dictatorship, and the fight for a peaceful Europe, Ukraine is on the front lines — not unlike West Germany during the Cold War." washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/… 5/ END
@McFaul We are not fighting Russia over Ukraine.
@McFaul "Democracy"? In Ukraine? 😂 x.com/27khv/status/1…
@McFaul @threadreaderapp Por favor roll, bitte
@McFaul But Germany, nowadays is near Russia... x.com/brainstormcarl…
@McFaul But Germany, nowadays is near Russia... x.com/brainstormcarl…
@McFaul Narrator: there was no global struggle between democracy and dictatorship. That was invented rhetoric to spend American blood and treasure in horrible wars. Nations move in their own self interest or at the guidance of interests which direct them.
@McFaul I mean perhaps some of this could have been avoided if you had made sure you were in the room when the administration was talking about a coup against the democratically elected Ukrainian government and said "that's a terrible idea". Just a thought.
@McFaul Why is the US arming the dictatorship of Saudi Arabia?