Good point, Linda. Perhaps Nora does not know that, in her 1991 vote for independence, every oblast / province voted to exit the U.S.S.R. and that six of every seven people (at least) in Donbass wanted out of the evil empire. The open question remains Crimea in which a razor-thin majority favoured independence. That one may need to be negotiated.
Good point, Linda. Perhaps Nora does not know that, in her 1991 vote for independence, every oblast / province voted to exit the U.S.S.R. and that six of every seven people (at least) in Donbass wanted out of the evil empire. The open question remains Crimea in which a razor-thin majority favoured independence. That one may need to be negotiated.
Russia after the defeat of Russia. The negotiations, were they to occur, would not be designed to settle the current conflict but to avoid future ones.
Good point, Linda. Perhaps Nora does not know that, in her 1991 vote for independence, every oblast / province voted to exit the U.S.S.R. and that six of every seven people (at least) in Donbass wanted out of the evil empire. The open question remains Crimea in which a razor-thin majority favoured independence. That one may need to be negotiated.
Ned, with whom would they be negotiating?
Russia after the defeat of Russia. The negotiations, were they to occur, would not be designed to settle the current conflict but to avoid future ones.