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Tony F.'s avatar

The thing that continues to shock me is what a lose-lose this appears to be for Russia. This is their Mike Tyson/Buster Douglas moment. For those who don't follow boxing, Tyson was a feared heavyweight who had a devistating knock out punch. People fighting him were on the defense, trying not to immediately get knocked out. He fought Buster Douglas as a 'get ready' fight; Douglas, who wasn't ranked very high and had little to lose, went toe-to-toe with Tyson and knocked him out. Tyson went on to win again, but was never quite regarded the same way afterwards -- he wasn't unbeatable.

Russia is still a dangerous country. But, man -- Putin was supposed to be a 4D chessmaster at strategy. How could he play his hand so badly? One wonders if one of the lessons China's Xi will take is how to be an autocratic leader yet continue to get good, rational advice from your team. Because this looks like nobody was willing to tell Putin that this was a terrible idea -- and that's always a huge risk for autocrats.

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CoolPro's avatar

Good column, and a great primer for the millions who do not know this history. My wife and I visited (unified) Germany in October of 1998, not quite a decade after the fall of the wall. We stayed for an evening with older family friends near Munich and visited with friends in Heidelberg. As part of former West Germany, the experience was largely equivalent to our own experience in Canada - modern, open, free, progressive. Travelling by train around the country and crossing into (former) East Germany was like going through a time warp. Modern farms and related equipment were instantly replaced with decrepitude - 40 year old trucks and tractors, ramshackle farm buildings, and generally terrible crops compared to the (former) western crops we had observed out the train windows. Arriving in Berlin was the largest shock. The wall still existed in some places, and the debate at the time among Berliners was if it should be eradicated completely, or portions of it retained as a warning to future generations. Arriving at Potsdamer Platz south of the Brandenburg Gates and the Reichstag was jarring, as money from the west was pouring into the area and bringing it into modernity. Individual former West Berliners were of mixed feelings toward their relatively new former East German compatriots. Some said they needed time, others noted they were lazy and entitled after living for decades under communism. What they all shared, as you point out, was the shame of their Nazi and militaristic past. 'Never again' was a universal sentiment at the time. All Germans we encountered during that trip would be considered pacifists. The friendships we've maintained since 1998 reaffirmed that shame-fueled pacifism as a core element of the German national character. I share your astonishment at the sudden German initiative to rearm themselves. I'm not against it, just shocked with the instantaneous sea change in the German national character and leadership.

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