pull down to refresh

The War in Ukraine has cost the West a lot of global influence, argues Ted Snider.
"Several members of the political West have been punished in elections recently, including Italy, Austria, Finland, Portugal, Slovakia, Australia and Japan. While many members in good standing among the political West have fallen, governments outside of the political West, including all the original members of BRICS, who have taken alternative policy approaches to the war in Ukraine have fared better. Some have done worse than they traditionally have, and though not all meet the West’s criterion for democracy, Russia, China, India, and South Africa have all re-elected their governments. Brazil returned Lula da Silva to power, a man strongly supportive of BRICS and, along with China, has played a leading role, unlike the political West, in advocating for a diplomatic solution to the war in Ukraine."
The narratives regarding the war in Ukraine, here in Brazil, are very different from what is treated in most Western countries, I think. In Brazil, nationalists and left-wing parties claim that Russia has an enormous justification for invading Ukraine, because of the advance of NATO bases in Eastern Europe. Right-wing parties do not like the proximity to BRICS, however, they cannot be emphatic, simply because China is an excellent trading partner.
reply
I'm never going to describe something like Russia's invasion as "justified", but it was absolutely provoked by the west.
On that note, Scott Horton's book Provoked just came out. Scott lays out the case that Russia was provoked, in great detail.
reply
There are many factors regarding the invasion of Ukraine: Ukraine's entry into the European Union to economically suffocate Russia, the annexation of Crimea and the separatist regions within Ukrainian territory. Thank you for recommending the book... I really like this topic of geopolitics
reply