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Ukraine deploys units to five Middle East countries to intercept drones (reuters.com)
14 points by onemoresoop 6 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 16 comments
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Sure.. why not andd another country to the war. Next thing you know the whole world is at war

You do realize Iran was supplying shahed drones for 4 years now? Ukraine was hit with almost 60000 of those drones, vast majority targeting civilian population in clear terrorist attacks. Iran was always a party to the russian war.

This behavior makes sense for Zelensky, who is strongly pro-Israel, but I don’t think this is in Ukraine’s best interest. I really hate how many people have died in the Russia-Ukraine war and this will only serve to lengthen it. Imagine getting drafted to go fight Iran.

Your comment seems unrelated to the article?

That Ukraine is taking frontline needed anti-drone resources to protect 3rd parties in a war it is not involved in?

What part of their comment seems unrelated?


Ukraine has unutilised domestic production capacity. They can turn the good money the Gulf states will be paying for the drones into more drones for the frontlines.

It is the 430 people that could be defending Ukraine.

When people say ”time is money”, there is usually an amount of money that makes you go ”… but then again a lot of money is also money” and give up some time in exchange for that money.

Wartime resources are similar, in the sense that they’re at least partially fungible. Maybe the amount of money the Gulf states are willing to pay for borrowing those people buys you a lot of the other stuff.


It got involved because it was Iran who supplied Shahed drones to Russia and Russia in turn supplies upgraded drones and other weapons to Iran. Pressure on Iran means to pressure on Russia and the reverse is also true.

https://x.com/ZelenskyyUa/status/2033982485583818789


Uhm, did you miss this bit?

> Zelenskiy has said Kyiv wanted money and technology in return for its help in the Middle East


Yeah, pretty sad situation especially if you have some empathy for those who don't want to fight but got tricked by their governments. Imagine you're 18 again and you have your plans to study in University, but instead the government which should serve the people (ha) sends you to die for a piece of land and to keep their leader positions.

In the end those wars are just a power and influence games for the ruling class.

Sometimes I think if the world would be better if instead of ~200 counties we had only ~10? But how to unite counties? People can agree to unite, but no one from the ruling class will agree to lose the power. So we are back to the war theme, because the war is the easiest way to unite pieces of land, but how to unite people? No idea, but... but we can find a new common enemy!


Ukraine draft age limit is now 25. It was lowered from 27 in 2024. If you are young and heading to university, you’re safe (for now). Even if the age limit is lowered, it will likely apply to NEETs first.

Good to know, but my comment is not about Ukraine or any other country in particular

> Imagine you're 18 again and you have your plans to study in University, but instead the government which should serve the people (ha) sends you to die for a piece of land and to keep their leader positions

Your simplistic narrative doesn't capture the reality of the situation, at all. The people of Ukraine weren't given a choice of whether to be at war or not, doubly so for people in the eastern part of the country. And it's not just about who is the "leader", but rather staring down a known pattern of atrocities and long-term economic oppression. So attributing the responsibility of who ruined those plans to "the government" is just fallacious.

Your pragmatic personal decision might still be to run, and I wouldn't be arguing against that. But extrapolating that personal decision out to a general condemnation of other reactions to being attacked is disingenuous and reeks of the demoralizing propaganda put out by Russia.


Thanks for your analysis, but I never said anything about Ukraine in my post

Ukraine is the topic of the thread, so you were implicitly talking about it.

For what it's worth, I would have agreed where you're coming from 10-15 years ago. But from a Western perspective it's very easy to forget that there is such a thing as a defensive war

For example, I'm having trouble coming up with the last defensive war the US mainland actually experienced where a loss would have resulted in a different government. It feels like it was so long ago that it makes the question moot.




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