Is Alaska a compelling utopia? - İsmet HERGÜNŞEN

Is Alaska a compelling utopia? - İsmet HERGÜNŞEN

PLEASE SUBSCRIBE! SUBSCRIPTION to our POYRAZ MAVİ VATAN YOUTUBE channel is FREE. Please join us via the link I will provide. Thank you…    / @poyraz2022   https://www.poyraz.media/ twitter:   / poyraz_media   instagram:   / poyraz.mediagrubu   Is Alaska a coercive utopia? “Strategy can be considered the logical analysis and presentation of ideas based on two wills. It is an art. Through this art, one will forces the other's course of action,” said General Bauffer. The recent meetings between US President Donald Trump and Russian Federation (RF) President Vladimir Putin also aligned with this narrative. With the parking of their planes, their simultaneous descent of the stairs, their cordial handshakes, and their unpretentious protocols, both leaders declared, "We are equal." While it may not have been particularly convincing, the message they were trying to convey to the world was clear: "We pursue peace." The "USSR" message, worn by Russia's 21-year Foreign Minister before the meeting, on a T-shirt, could be said to have brought a smile to the face of everyone who had witnessed the developments since the fall of the Berlin Wall. The fact that the leaders were hosted at Elmendorf Air Base in Alaska, one of the US's most important bases opening up to the Pacific, and the fact that planes flew overhead gave the meeting a special significance. While Putin appeared more relaxed in front of the press, Trump, who had been patronizing toward previous leaders, displayed excitement, suggesting, "Who knows, he might have a Nobel Prize on his mind." Messages about the "future of Ukraine" before and after the meeting created a positive atmosphere. However, the optimistic atmosphere in Alaska was overshadowed by a meeting with several European leaders, including the EU Commission President, NATO Secretary General, and the Ukrainian leader, whom the US President had hastily invited to the White House. Statements made by European leaders suggested a fragility between them and Trump. Turkey, on the brink of war yet uncalled for and uninvited to the meeting, made such a sudden statement that was impossible to understand or accept. Ukraine has now been added to the list of countries falling prey to the imperialists. One thing is certain: Ukrainians are paying the price for President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's lack of foresight and his reliance on the Western world, especially the US. The "Precious Metals Agreement," the ink of which is still on the table, has brought Ukraine to the brink of being condemned to US capitulations. After Crimea, with the territorial losses in Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhia, and Kherson, Ukraine will be reduced to the status of a war loser; The Sea of ​​Azov will fall completely under Russian control. We will see how much longer Ukraine, constitutionally unable to hold elections in a war environment, will endure the delusions of its heads of state. Having achieved EU candidate status, the security guarantees Ukraine will receive outside of NATO membership may lose their value over time. Therefore, it will be inevitable that Ukraine will remain in the Russian Federation's crosshairs forever. Today, five settlements, tomorrow divided in two, Kyiv and the west of the Dnieper River... In later years, all of Ukraine. While the Russian Federation appears to be the victor, its losses are greater than expected. For the Russian Federation, subjected to heavy economic sanctions, the Baltic Sea, despite its three ports, has become a veritable "NATO Lake" with the NATO membership of Sweden and Finland. For the Russian Black Sea Fleet, which has suffered significant damage, including the loss of the Moskva Cruiser, a situation has emerged that will make one say, "Thank goodness there was the Montreux Convention Regarding the Straits." While the revolt by the Russian mercenary company Wagner Group exposed the weaknesses of the Putin administration, the outcome was a disappointment for Ukraine. The EU, unable to alleviate concerns and demonstrate its ability to take initiative, appears unlikely to restore its relations with Russia as long as it continues to follow the US's lead. For the US, which appears to have gained the upper hand, it will be difficult to tear down the wall between China and Russia, with whom it has been waging trade wars, while the SCO and BRICS are involved. Will Donald Trump, who constantly claims to have stopped six wars, be able to pull a rabbit out of a hat in the Ukraine War? Let's conclude with the words of İsmet İnönü, the Second President of the Republic of Turkey, who kept Turkey out of the war during World War II: “Establishing relations with great powers is like going to bed with a bear. Even while you sleep, you must be alert.” His final words: “The future of Ukraine without NATO is bleak.” İsmet HERGÜNŞEN