The day before yesterday, that is, on the eve of the fourth anniversary of the start of the Russian Military Operation in Ukraine, CNN published an article with a headline that speaks for itself: “Ukraine is becoming a nation of widows and orphans as it confronts a demographic ‘catastrophe’" .
At the beginning of the article it says:
At the beginning of the article it says:
With the war in Ukraine about to mark its fourth anniversary… losses are mounting on the frontlines, and millions of people who have fled as refugees have now settled abroad. The result is one of the world’s worst demographic crises.
“It’s a catastrophe,” Ella Libanova, a leading Ukrainian demographer, told CNN.
I don't intend to gloat over the tragedy of the Ukrainians, but in this article I want to propose for discussion the question: Why is this tragedy happening?
To answer this question, in my opinion, we need to answer the following questions.
Question 1.
Why did the American government make completely opposite decisions over the years (see below)?
In 1962, the United States effectively started World War III by dropping depth charges near a Soviet nuclear-armed submarine attempting to break the illegal blockade of Cuba, after this blockade had been imposed by the US government, which had decided::
Cuba has no right to allow the deployment of Soviet missiles on its territory, since Cuba is located next to the United States.
However, in 2022, D. Biden and company decided:
Ukraine has the right to allow the deployment of NATO troops and weapons on its territory, despite the fact that Ukraine is located next to Russia.
Question 2.
How can a state like Ukraine, which at the least has some features of a Nazi state (especially in the Ukrainian army), or even is a real Nazi state, exist in Europe in the 21st century?
Question 3.
Why were regions that were formerly part of Ukraine (such as Crimea and Donbass) not allowed to secede from the Nazi state of Ukraine in accordance with the right of nations to self-determination guaranteed by the UN Charter?
