Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has broken ranks with other NATO leaders as he refused to commit to spending 5 percent of GDP on defense. It’s a welcome move, and a rare voice of dissent from Europe’s rush to remilitarize.
What an absurdly derailed form of whataboutism is this? Russia is waging a war against Ukraine and preparing to invade other European nations (as you can see from the Kremlin’s military spending). It was Russia which started this war and constitutes a threat to Europe, this has nothing to do with what happens in other world areas.
This a knee jerk reaction that misunderstands what I’m actually saying. It might have been whataboutism if I was making a “yea but what about whaaa” cheap shot at derailing the discussion. I wasn’t however. I talked about how the one situation impacts the other and is made more expensive and difficult by the other. Spain happens to be one of the very few western countries to speak up against the madness in the middle east and about the importance of international law. It is objectively harder to pass and enforce sanctions on Russia precisely because a bunch of non western countries just see the double standard and refuse to cooperate. Our support for the Israeli apartheid regime is making it harder to make politically the case for Ukraine, making it harder to encircle and contain Russia, erodes morale in our own countries and diverts resources and energy to adventurist dead ends.
@theacharnian@lemmy.ca @acargitz@lemmy.ca
What an absurdly derailed form of whataboutism is this? Russia is waging a war against Ukraine and preparing to invade other European nations (as you can see from the Kremlin’s military spending). It was Russia which started this war and constitutes a threat to Europe, this has nothing to do with what happens in other world areas.
This a knee jerk reaction that misunderstands what I’m actually saying. It might have been whataboutism if I was making a “yea but what about whaaa” cheap shot at derailing the discussion. I wasn’t however. I talked about how the one situation impacts the other and is made more expensive and difficult by the other. Spain happens to be one of the very few western countries to speak up against the madness in the middle east and about the importance of international law. It is objectively harder to pass and enforce sanctions on Russia precisely because a bunch of non western countries just see the double standard and refuse to cooperate. Our support for the Israeli apartheid regime is making it harder to make politically the case for Ukraine, making it harder to encircle and contain Russia, erodes morale in our own countries and diverts resources and energy to adventurist dead ends.