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Judy's avatar

I have long thought that Putin felt that Ukraine as a thriving democracy was a danger so close to the authoritarian Russian state. With many Ukrainians speaking both languages, and talk of EU and NATO membership, I wonder if that wasn't the big threat to Putin rather than an actual military threat from NATO membership. With free flow along the Ukr-Rus border, how long would it be before Russians realized that there was a better way of governance. Just a thought. But it does seem that Putin made a mistake of great magnitude on 2/24/22.

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Keith Wheelock's avatar

I was struck by the mention of Stalingrad along with Bakhmut. As a youth I remember the importance of Stalingrad. Stalin insisted they it would not be lost to the Nazis. Countless soldiers were thrown into the house-by-house conflict and orders were issued to shoot any Soviet soldier who retreated.

Stalingrad was symbolic of the reversal of the Nazi invasion. It was the turning point in the Soviet/German conflict.

In a microcosm, it appears that Bakhmut was Putin’s ‘Stalingrad’ in Ukraine. It has no dominant strategic value. Rather it was symbolic of Putin’s ‘special military operation.’ The Wagner group was heading the grinding assault. The US and others were puzzled why Zelensky was so firm on retaining Bakhmut. Putin desperately wanted to point to the full capture of Bakhmut before his ‘glorious’ May 9th event.

Instead, Ukraine launched a modest counter offensive, retook portions of Bakhmut, and denied Putin his minor May 9th ‘victory’—a humiliation!

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