“Whether you like it, or not, history is on our side. We will bury you,” he said quoting former USSR leader Nikita Khrushchev.
Russian politician Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday Russia could have a right to go to war with NATO.
“Whether you like it, or not, history is on our side. We will bury you,” he said quoting former USSR leader Nikita Khrushchev.
Russian politician Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday Russia could have a right to go to war with NATO.
It’s written right in your article:
Read past the first line.
It’s all that matters. Some random utterances, speaking off the record etc. don’t count, aren’t and cannot be binding.
How could we bind ourselves to something if we don’t even know what exactly was promised?
Furthermore, were those people uttering those hypothetical sentences even authorized to make such promises? We’ll never know, they were never written down, never vetted, nothing. It’s all meaningless.
Nope. The article then goes on to describe his research into exactly how NATO discussed how there was a long history of informal agreements during the cold war. The Cuban Missile Crisis was resolved informally for example.
Well, US domestic politics isn’t international, is it?
What did the other side receive? We’ll never know, since it wasn’t recorded, most people involved can’t remember (Gorbachev couldn’t recall any such promises) and/or are already dead.
It can be used to resolve an immediate problem. But it’s absurd to think that an unrecorded agreement whose terms nobody knows will be binding for eternity.
Wars have been started for far less. Not like there’s a world court that’s going to rule if a claim is valid or not.
This is not why the war was started, this is just the excuse they’re trying to justify it with. Don’t be complicit.
Yeah I know. And in the end the reason doesn’t matter, like at all.